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Chan Yan-tak

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chan Yan-tak
Born
Kowloon, Hong Kong[1]
Culinary career
Cooking styleCantonese cuisine
Rating(s)
Current restaurant(s)

Chan Yan-tak (Chinese: 陳恩德; pinyin: Chén Ēndé; Jyutping: Can4 Jan1dak1) is a Hong Kong/Chinese chef, who is best known for being the first Chinese chef to earn three Michelin stars. He began to work in restaurants in his early teens, and went on to earn his stars at the Lung King Heen restaurant in the Four Seasons hotel in Hong Kong, after they coaxed him out of retirement and back into the kitchen.

Biography

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Born in Kowloon, Hong Kong, Chan Yan-tak started working in the kitchen out of necessity: after his father died when he was a child, he began working in kitchens at the age of either 13 or 14 at the Dai Sam Yuen restaurant.[2][3] He didn't have any particular desire to become a chef, but instead took on the job because his family needed the money. He was so young at the time that he wasn't allowed to use a knife, and was limited to tasks such as plucking chickens and washing vegetables.[2] He became a cook, and worked at a number of restaurants during the 1970s in Hong Kong,[2] including Fook Lam Moon.[3] In 1984 he joined a restaurant at the Regent Hotel Hong Kong as sous chef, becoming executive chef the year after, and worked there for the following fifteen years.[2][3]

Yan-tak retired from the catering industry following the death of his wife so that he could care for his daughter, but in 2002 the Four Seasons hotel in Hong Kong brought him out of his retirement to become executive chef of the Lung King Heen (English: View of the Dragon) restaurant.[4] The restaurant was awarded three stars in the 2009 Guide Michelin for Hong Kong and Macau, for his Cantonese seafood dishes. He became the first Chinese chef to obtain this distinction,[2] on the first occasion that Michelin brought out a guide for Asia outside of Tokyo. The only other three star award went to a restaurant by Joël Robuchon in Macau.[5]

Personal life

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Yan-tak has two children, one son and one daughter.[2]

References

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  1. ^ "Chan Yan Tak". Four Seasons.com. Retrieved 29 August 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Lau, Joyce Hor-Chung (2 January 2009). "A Chinese Chef's Long Path to 3 Stars". The New York Times. Retrieved 3 January 2009.
  3. ^ a b c "Lung King Heen". The Worlds 50 Best Restaurants. Archived from the original on 28 August 2012. Retrieved 29 August 2012.
  4. ^ Li, Zoe (8 December 2009). "Questions for Chan Yan Tak, Lung King Heen's 3-star Michelin chef". CNN Travel. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
  5. ^ Renton, Alex (4 December 2009). "Chan Yan-tak: China's first three Michelin star chef". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 August 2012.