When Dollie Pearce and her husband moved to Tucson in 2016, they were excited to start a new chapter in the desert. But as they settled in, they realized something was missing.
“We saw there were not a lot of places to eat food that we were used to,” Pearce said.
That realization planted the seed for what would later become Janet & Ray’s, a Caribbean–soul fusion restaurant now located near East 22nd Street and Craycroft Road. The opportunity came while the couple was driving through the area, noticed a building for lease and decided to pursue it.
Pearce also brings experience from Detroit’s food and nightlife scene, where she has been involved in restaurants specializing in wings and other comfort food, as well as nightlife spaces. That experience informs her approach to Janet & Ray’s, from its bold flavors to its crowd-driven menu.
Janet & Ray’s is named after Pearce’s mother and her father-in-law, both of whom have since passed away.
“My mother had restaurants,” she said. “My grandfather was a very skilled chef, he cooked all over the world. My family cooks.”
Janet & Ray’s shifts its menu frequently, based on ingredient availability, cost, and Pearce’s inspiration.
Their food blends Caribbean flavors with American soul food, creating a fusion that feels both comforting and bold. But some dishes, especially traditional Jamaican staples, can’t be offered every day.
“Oxtails and goat — all of that is expensive, so we can’t do it every day,” Pearce said.
On Saturdays, however, the menu leans heavily Jamaican. Customers can expect favorites like oxtail, curry goat, and festival bread, a lightly sweet fried bread often paired with jerk chicken or porridge.
Festival bread is just one example of how much time and care goes into each dish.
“Our food is harder to cook because it takes so much,” Pearce said. “When we make jerk chicken, we have to grill it. And not only that — we’re blending all of our foods.”
That includes ingredients like scotch bonnet peppers and specialty seasonings, many of which Pearce has to source from out of state.
“We don’t have a big Caribbean community here,” she said. “So I order most of my seasonings from Florida or Atlanta.”
That attention to seasoning shows up especially in the wings. One of the house blends includes lemon pepper, sugar and ranch seasoning, creating a balance that’s savory, slightly sweet and tangy all at once. The flavor hits differently with each bite.
At Janet & Ray’s, no two bites are meant to taste exactly the same. Whether it’s chicken, jerk seasoning or soul food sides, the flavors build and shift, making the food feel dynamic rather than predictable.
The drink menu at Janet & Ray’s reflects the same attention to authenticity. The restaurant offers D&G sodas imported from Jamaica, including the popular cola champagne, a sweet, bubbly soda that tastes nothing like Coca-Cola despite its name.
Other options include Ting, a grapefruit soda similar to Squirt, along with pineapple soda, cream soda, and pineapple ginger, all rarely found in Tucson.
What truly sets Janet & Ray’s apart is its approach to soul food, particularly its decision to be a no-pork restaurant.
“In a lot of Black communities, they don’t eat pork,” Pearce said. “A lot of my customers are Muslim — the Sudanese community and I don’t want to offend.”
Rather than sacrificing flavor, Pearce substitutes pork with smoked turkey across the menu.
“You don’t need the pork,” she said. “You won’t miss it. You don’t even know the difference.”
That philosophy carries through signature dishes like the mac and cheese, which Pearce proudly describes as anything but basic.
“We use real cheese. We use garlic, onion, seasoning, parsley,” she said. “Our collard greens use smoked turkey. Our black-eyed peas, same thing. Our yams use real butter, real vanilla sugar. Everything is real.”
That same attention to richness and balance shows up in the Friday special lobster mac and cheese, a more indulgent take on the classic. The dish leans heavily on shrimp, mixed throughout a cheese-forward base, and is finished with a piece of lobster on top.
While comfort food remains at the heart of Janet & Ray’s, Pearce is currently updating the menu to include more health-forward options, without losing what makes the restaurant special.
Upcoming additions include smoothies and fresh salads, such as a salmon salad, jerk chicken salad, and a grilled pineapple salad topped with toasted coconut and plantain chips.
“It’s so good,” Pearce said. “Everything right now is my skincare.”
She’s intentional about the ingredients, incorporating olive oil, lemon juice, and other components she says support skin health and overall wellness.
“Everything is more focused on health and wellness,” she said.
Janet & Ray’s has become a destination spot, drawing customers not only from Tucson but from Phoenix and beyond, especially on weekends.
For first-time visitors, Pearce has one clear recommendation.
“The chicken and waffles,” she said.
The dish features East Coast–style wings paired with house-made waffles that rotate in flavor depending on the day. Options might include peach cobbler, banana pudding, caramel crunch, or red velvet waffles.
“You never know when you come in,” Pearce said. “That’s kind of our menu.”
At its core, Janet & Ray’s is about sharing culture, honoring family, and creating something Tucson didn’t have before.
And for Pearce, that’s exactly the point.
Janet & Ray’s is located at 5443 E. 22nd St. For more information, visit janetandrays.com.
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