May Chow

May Chow
Born Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Education Boston University
Home town Hong Kong
Culinary career

May Chow is a Canadian-born chef, who runs restaurants in Hong Kong and Thailand. She was named Asia's Best Female Chef in 2017, and has used this as a platform to promote LGBT issues and help women find work in professional kitchens.

Career

May Chow was born in Toronto, Canada.[1] She was interested in cooking from an early age, helping her mother in the kitchen. She had wanted to take up horse riding or ceramics, but her parents were reluctant and so she used cooking as a creative outlet. Chow attended Suffield Academy in Suffield, Connecticut, but when she suggested that she wanted to go to culinary school, her college councillor rebuked her and told her to choose from a provided list of schools. Chow attended Boston University, where she studied hotel management. As part of the third year, she undertook cooking classes offered by local chefs.[2]

While at University, she worked part-time as a chef,[2] Chow chose not to tell her parents that she was working as a chef.[3] After graduation, she moved to Los Angeles where she worked alongside the private chef for director James Cameron. Chow travelled to Hong Kong in 2009, and was hired at Alvin Leung's Bo Innovation where she worked for a year. Afterwards she worked with Que Vinh Dang at TBLS which has since been closed,[4] as a private chef, and at Yardbird with Matt Abergel.[2]

Chow first showed her signature mini bao buns at an Island East Market in Hong Kong in 2012. Abergel suggested to her to make her buns look like burgers, and supported her endeavour. She sold out her buns repeatedly at the farmer's market, and opened a permanent store in 2013, entitled Little Bao. A second location followed in 2017, in Bangkok, along with a beer bar called Second Draft, in Tai Hang.[2][3]

In 2017, she was named the Best Female Chef by Asia's 50 Best Restaurants. She was contacted late in 2016 and told that she had won, in order to find out if she would accept or decline. Chow considered declining because of the responsibility that came with it, but decided to accept instead.[2] She has used her local fame to focus on campaigning for LGBT issues, and to provide more opportunities for women in professional kitchens.[1] She has also worked on a new Chinese restaurant in Hong Kong, called Happy Paradise.[5] She also appeared on the Food Network series Inspired with Anna Olson.[6]

References

  1. 1 2 "Asia's Best Female Chef 2017". Asia's 50 Best Restaurants. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Hong Kong's May Chow, voted Asia's best female chef, talks about her culinary journey". South China Morning Post. 14 December 2016. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  3. 1 2 Cheung, Helier (2 January 2017). "The Chinese burger designed by Asia's 'best female chef'". BBC News. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  4. "TBLS Kitchen Studio". OpenRice. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  5. Dwyer, Chris (20 February 2017). "May Chow: "This Award is a Social Duty"". Fine Dining Lovers. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  6. "Cooking with Chef May Chow in Hong Kong". Food Network. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
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