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Marcus Samuelsson
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Marcus Samuelsson (born Kassahun Tsegie in 1970 in Ethiopia)[1] is the chef and co-owner of Aquavit restaurant in New York City and C-House Restaurant, located in the Affina Hotel in Chicago.
Early Life and Career
After their birth mother died in a tuberculosis epidemic when he was three years old, Kassahun Tsegie and his elder sister, Fantaye,[2] were adopted by Ann Marie and Lennart Samuelsson, a homemaker and a geologist, who lived in Gothenburg, Sweden. The siblings' names were changed to Marcus and Linda Samuelsson. They also have an adopted sister, Anna Samuelsson. Samuelsson's biological father, Tsegie, is a priest and father of eight of the chef's half-siblings; he still lives in the village where Samuelsson was born.[3]
After becoming interested in cooking because of his maternal grandmother in Sweden, Samuelsson studied at the Culinary Institute in Gothenburg, where he grew up, apprenticed in Switzerland and Austria, and came to the United States in 1991 as an apprentice at Restaurant Aquavit. At 24, Marcus became executive chef of Aquavit, and soon after that became the youngest ever to receive a three-star restaurant review from The New York Times. In 2003 he was named "Best Chef: New York City" by the James Beard Foundation. The same year he started a second New York restaurant, Riingo, serving Japanese-influenced American food.
In addition to his recognition as a world-class chef, Samuelsson is an award-winning cookbook author with titles in both English and Swedish. His 2006 African-inspired cookbook "The Soul of a New Cuisine" received the honor of "Best International Cookbook" by the James Beard Foundation. Other titles written by Samuelsson are "Aquavit and the New Scandinavian Cuisine", "En Smakresa (A Journey of Tastes)", and "Street Food".
Samuelsson is an adjunct professor in Meal Sciences at Umeå University (Umeå University School of Restaurant and Culinary Arts) in Sweden[4]. He had a television show, "Inner Chef," which aired in 2005 on Discovery Home Channel and yet another show in 2008, Urban Cuisine on BET J/Centric. His cooking combines international influences with traditional cuisines from Sweden to Japan and Africa.[5]
Samuelsson appeared on Iron Chef America, but was defeated by Iron Chef Bobby Flay in battle Corn.
He is an advisor to The Institute of Culinary Education in New York City.
Marcus is married to model Gate (Maya) Haile.
External links
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcus_Samuelsson"
Categories: 1970 births | Living people | Adoptees | Swedish people of Black African descent | American television chefs | Ethiopian chefs | Umeå University faculty | Swedish people of Ethiopian descent
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