Marcus Samuelsson

@Chefs, Life Achievements and Life

This famous chef-restaurateur is known for carving a niche in the cooking world despite suffering racial discrimination

Jan 25, 1970

EthiopianFood ExpertsChefsAquarius Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: January 25, 1970
  • Nationality: Ethiopian
  • Famous: Food Experts, Chefs
  • Spouses: Maya Haile (m. 2009)
  • Known as: Marcus 'Joar' Samuelsson
  • Childrens: Zoe Samuelsson
  • Universities:
    • The Culinary Institute of America

Marcus Samuelsson born at

Addis Ababa

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Birth Place

Samuelsson is a Visiting Professor of ‘International Culinary Science’ at the ‘Umea University School of Restaurant and Culinary Arts’ in Sweden.

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Personal Life

He is an ambassador for the U.S. Fund for UNICEF and he is on the board of directors of the ‘Careers Through Culinary Arts Program’ in New York City.

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Personal Life

He married professional model Gate Haile in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in 2009. Like Samuelsson, Haile was born in Ethiopia and raised in Europe. They live in a restored brownstone home in New York's Harlem neighborhood, near Red Rooster.

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Personal Life

Samuelsson was born ‘Kassahun Tsegie’ in rural Ethiopia on January 25, 1970. He was orphaned at an early age of two when his mother died of tuberculosis.

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Childhood & Early Life

Kassahun and his older sister, Fantaye, had tuberculosis too. But fortunately they recovered and found a home, when Ann Marie and Lennart Samuelsson adopted the siblings and took them to Gothenburg, Sweden. The adoptive parents changed their names to Marcus and Linda and they grew up with an adopted sister, Anna.

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Childhood & Early Life

Young Marcus had a happy childhood, although the racial slurs that were hurled at black children in the small town of Sweden were hard to take sometimes. He loved soccer. He also loved catching fish and preparing and preserving food when his family spent their summers in Smögen, on the coast of Sweden.

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Childhood & Early Life

Marcus and Linda's biological father lived in his village with Samuelssons' eighteen half siblings. He reconnected with his biological father in 2000 and met those half siblings in Ethiopia. He financially supports the education of some of these relatives.

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Childhood & Early Life

Marcus Samuelsson learned to cook beside his Swedish grandmother, Helga, a woman who had worked domestic jobs most of her life. Some of her homey specialties were roasted chicken, pickled vegetables and jams she made from lingonberries and apples.

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Career

After he graduated from the ‘Culinary Institute’ in Gothenburg, he apprenticed in Switzerland in 1989, then Austria and France before moving to the United States.

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Career

The Swedish restaurant ‘Aquavit’ in New York hired Samuelsson as an apprentice in 1994 and he worked his way up to executive chef. Under his management the restaurant earned three stars from ‘The New York Times’ in a few months. The following year, at 23 years old, he was the youngest chef ever to win a 3-star rating.

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Career

Gradually, Samuelsson evolved from a wunderkind of Scandinavian food to a culinary explorer who delved deep into his own roots. He learned about berbere spice mixes and how to make flat, spongy injera bread when he visited Ethiopia. Eventually he wrote a cookbook about African cuisine, titled 'The Soul of a New Cuisine: A Discovery of the Foods and Flavors of Africa'.

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Career

He was guest chef at the White House for the first state dinner of President Barack Obama's administration in 2009. The dinner, in honor of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, was largely vegetarian. Samuelsson used vegetables and herbs from the White House Garden and evoked Indian flavors in dishes like red lentil soup, roasted potato dumplings and green curry prawns.

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Career

The famous chef is also the author of numerous cookbooks which have received critical acclaim. 'The Soul of a New Cuisine: A Discovery of the Foods and Flavors of Africa' was honored with a ‘James Beard Award’ for ‘Best International Cookbook’ in 2007.

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Major Works

The chef also wrote, 'Aquavit and the New Scandinavian Cuisine', 'EnSmakresa med Marcus Samuelsson', 'New American Table' and 'Off Duty: The Recipes I Cook at Home' and 'Street Food’. His memoir 'Yes, Chef: A Memoir' with Veronica Chambers was nominated for a ‘James Beard Foundation’ award and featured in New York Times Bestseller.

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Major Works