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Executive ChefMoses Besele Moloi
LocationJohannesburg, South Africa
The Best Chef

Gigi, at Waterfall Corner in Midrand, is a Johannesburg restaurant operating under chef Moses Besele Moloi, a figure whose profile sits within the broader shift of South African cooking talent moving from fine-dining apprenticeships into independently driven formats. The address places it in Waterfall City's growing commercial and dining district, increasingly relevant for northern-Joburg diners seeking serious cooking outside the traditional northern suburbs circuit.

Gigi restaurant in Johannesburg, South Africa
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Waterfall City and the Northern Restaurant Shift

Johannesburg's serious restaurant culture has long concentrated in Sandton, Rosebank, and the northern suburbs, with Midrand treated primarily as a logistics corridor between Joburg and Pretoria. That geography is changing. Waterfall City, the mixed-use precinct anchored around Waterfall Corner Shopping Centre, has drawn a different kind of dining investment over the past several years, one that reflects the broader South African trend of chefs choosing locations based on foot traffic and catchment economics rather than proximity to established food-media scenes. Gigi sits inside this shift, positioned on the corner of Waterfall Drive and Woodmead Drive in a precinct that draws from both the northern Joburg suburbs and the Midrand corporate corridor.

The context matters because it shapes expectations. Diners arriving at Waterfall Corner are not stepping into the kind of neighbourhood that signals fine dining in the conventional sense. What they find instead is a restaurant where the work on the plate carries the argument independently of its postcode, a pattern increasingly common in South African cities where real estate economics have pushed credible cooking outward from the traditional centres. For a comparison point, consider how Wolfgat in Paternoster built significant international recognition from a genuinely remote coastal setting, or how Klein Jan in Kalahari CBDC operates at the outer edge of plausible dining geography and makes that isolation part of its identity. Gigi's version of this equation is more suburban than remote, but the underlying logic — that location no longer determines culinary credibility — applies.

Moses Besele Moloi and the South African Training Pipeline

Chef Moses Besele Moloi's name is the primary credential attached to Gigi in the public record. South Africa's restaurant scene has, over the past decade, produced a recognisable pipeline of chefs who moved through formal fine-dining apprenticeships, often at properties with significant international exposure, before establishing their own formats. The country's Michelin-equivalent recognition is still developing , South Africa entered the Michelin map with its first Guide in 2023, covering Cape Town initially , which means chef reputations in Johannesburg are built largely through peer recognition, editorial attention, and the durability of the restaurants they anchor.

Moloi's position within this ecosystem is that of a chef whose name registers within Johannesburg's professional kitchen network. The specific details of his training trajectory are not available in the public record with sufficient verification to reproduce here, but the pattern his profile represents is well-established in South African cooking: chefs who move from structured fine-dining environments into formats where they carry both the creative and operational weight of a smaller, independently run restaurant. This is a different proposition from the chef-as-figurehead model seen at larger hotel restaurants, and it places Gigi in a peer set closer to independently driven neighbourhood restaurants than to hotel dining rooms.

For context on what ambition looks like at the upper end of the South African restaurant spectrum, Fyn in Cape Town operates a Japanese-South African fusion format that has drawn sustained critical attention, while Le Quartier Français in Franschhoek represents the French-influenced fine-dining tradition that shaped an earlier generation of South African chefs. Moloi's work at Gigi is, by geography and format, removed from both of those reference points, which is itself an editorial choice about where to operate and for whom.

The Johannesburg Restaurant Scene in Context

Johannesburg's restaurant industry has historically lacked the international editorial profile of Cape Town's, a gap that reflects both the city's lower tourist footfall and the concentration of South Africa's culinary media infrastructure in the Western Cape. That dynamic is slowly correcting. The city's northern dining corridor, which runs from Rosebank through Sandton and into areas like Waterfall, has produced a generation of restaurants that operate with the technical seriousness of their Cape Town counterparts without the same degree of international attention. Venues like Les Creatifs and The Blockman are part of this pattern, representing the range of formats the city now supports across different price points and dining styles.

The broader South African fine-dining tradition draws on a combination of European technique, indigenous ingredients, and the kind of wine-country influence that properties like Delaire Graff Lodges and Spa in Helshoogte Pass, Dusk in Stellenbosch, and Ellerman House in Bantry Bay have codified over years of operation. Johannesburg's version of this tradition is less wine-anchored by necessity, but the technical and creative ambitions are increasingly comparable. Safari lodge dining, as practised at venues like Esiweni Luxury Safari Lodge in Memorial Gate and Jabulani Safari in Hoedspruit, represents yet another strand of serious South African cooking, one oriented toward international visitors rather than the urban dining market Gigi addresses.

For global context, the independents model that Gigi represents has parallels at restaurants like Atomix in New York City, where a chef-driven format operating outside the most visible dining districts built recognition through the quality of execution rather than the visibility of the address. The comparison is not one of scale or international profile but of structural logic: chef-led formats in less expected locations that ask the cooking to make the case.

Planning a Visit to Gigi

Gigi is located at Waterfall Corner Shopping Centre, at the corner of Waterfall Drive and Woodmead Drive in Waterfall City, Midrand. The address sits between Johannesburg's northern suburbs and the Pretoria corridor, making it accessible from both directions without being an obvious walk-in destination for either. Diners travelling from Sandton or Rosebank should allow for the N1 or M1 connections into the Midrand area, and the shopping centre format means parking is not a constraint. For those planning a broader Johannesburg trip, the full range of the city's dining, drinking, and hotel options is covered in our full Johannesburg restaurants guide, our full Johannesburg bars guide, our full Johannesburg hotels guide, our full Johannesburg wineries guide, and our full Johannesburg experiences guide.

Current hours, booking method, and pricing are not available in the verified public record at time of publication. Prospective visitors should confirm operational details directly before travelling. The Waterfall City location, while direct by car, is not well-served by public transport, so self-drive or ride-hailing is the practical approach for most diners.

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