Chef Marcus Samuelsson elevates diversity of culinary world
Marcus Samuelsson is keen on leading with intention
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Your support makes all the difference.Marcus Samuelsson is keen on leading with intention. That focus is seared into the delectable dishes prepared at his popular restaurants, but it is also expressed with his staffing.
āMy restaurants are a reflection of the society weāre living in. (At) Hav & Mar, we decided on Black leadership, female leadership, because there was a void for it. Red Rooster opened in Harlem because we wanted to create jobs within our industry for Black and brown individuals,ā said Samuelsson, a multiple James Beard Award-winning chef. āI love food and I want to gear it towards ... everybody, but the opportunities should also be a little bit more evenly distributed.ā
To honor trailblazing restaurants founded by women and people of color, Samuelsson and fellow chef Jonathan Waxman host āSeat at the Table,ā an eight-part Audible original series that premiered toward the end of last year. In the series, chefs, along with many involved in the inception of their restaurants, present an oral history of some of Americaās most iconic eateries such as New Yorkās groundbreaking Jezebel, started by Albert Wright, Washington, DCās Benās Chili Bowl, by the Ali Family, and The Slanted Door, created by Charles Phan in San Francisco. Food serves as the roux of the podcast, while the impact the establishments have had on their communities and adds the shrimp, sausage and potatoes.
āComing out of Black History Month, going into Womenās (History) Month, I felt it was really necessary to share this, that we know our Black stories are not monolithic,ā said Samuelsson, who was born in a hut in Ethiopia but raised in Sweden after his birth mother died during a tuberculosis epidemic in the early '70s. āI always feel like when you enter a restaurant, youāre entering a piece of American history ... thatās really what we want to capture in āSeat at the Table.' Itās beyond the food ā itās really the people that make it so special.ā
Samuelsson spoke with The Associated Press about his mission to elevate women and people of color, selecting restaurants for the podcast and diversity in the culinary world. Answers may have been edited for clarity and brevity.
AP: Youāve mentioned your goal is to elevate women and talented, diverse people. Why is that part of your mission?
SAMUELSSON: As a Black chef that has privileges and a platform, itās very important to me that Iām setting the standard and creating jobs for other Black culinarians ā¦ One of the reasons why we always have open kitchens is the staff knows theyāre on a stage but also so the customer can see who cooks and works for them in the dining room. Same thing with Hav & Mar where our mission is to uplift women of color in leadership.
AP: How did you choose the restaurants?
SAMUELSSON: I didnāt by myself. It was a constant back-and-forth with my partner in this, Jonathan Waxman. ā¦ He didnāt just read about these chefs, he came up with these chefs. But he knew these stories, and we would never gotten as close to these incredible stories without Jonathanās work.
(Chef) Thomas Keller doesnāt do a lot of interviews, but he talked to Jonathan. And thatās why that story about The French Laundry is so unique. And Charlesā (Pham) story, thatās a story about the Vietnam War and how a true immigrant tale starts and how a restaurant maybe was not the way that they thought they would be in business, but it became a way of living for him and his family.
AP: What commonalities do you share with the chefs featured in the podcast?
SAMUELSSON: The desire that you want to share your narrative. ... I share that piece with Charles, of course, being an immigrant, feeling the love for America is sometimes misunderstood also.
Leah Chase (of Dooky Chase) has always been my mentor and somebody I admire so much. But I feel, also, Alberta Wright and Jezebel ā I was a kid growing up right across the street from Jezebel in Hellās Kitchen in New York City. And I know if I wouldnāt have met Ms. Leah Chase, I wouldnāt have met Alberta Wright, I wouldāve never created the Red Rooster or Have & Mar, my restaurant here in Manhattan. ā¦ I owe a lot to that generation of incredible Black women.
AP: How would you rate the culinary world when it comes to diversity?
SAMUELSSON: Food is part of society ... so weāre improving. We got a ways to go. And part of doing this doc with Audible was to really acknowledge how much labor, how much incredible Black restaurants that were in America that never got acknowledged.
Americaās history in terms of diversity is very complicated. But itās heading ā through a lot of work by effort, by a lot of people ā in a better direction. Iām a firm believer in that, even if you (have to) to work at it every day, weāre heading towards a better experience as people. And itās important because as diversity goes in America, the world is looking at America. So, itās very, very important to get these small wins because the rest of the world is taking note. As a Black person growing up outside of America, I know this firsthand.
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Follow Associated Press entertainment journalist Gary Gerard Hamilton at: @GaryGHamilton on all his social media platforms.