Thelma Golden: Hello! It is so fantastic
to be here with the TED community,
and here with you,
Marcus, here in Chelsea, at Hav and Mar,
to talk about Food for Good.
So I'm so excited for this conversation
because there's never a moment
where your story
and the way in which you think
about food isn't inspiring.
So let's start with your story.
How did you get here today?
Marcus Samuelsson:
Yeah. Well, first of all,
I'm extremely excited
to be part of this dialogue,
and also to be with you, Thelma,
dear, dear friend of mine,
but also somebody
that I admire in all things culture
and sometimes food.
I value your opinion on food. Yes.
TG: I appreciate that.
It's not my expertise, though.
MS: No.
TG: It’s your space.
MS: Yeah.
You know, I was born in Ethiopia,
and I realized I always start with that.
But like all our journeys,
it's not linear.
I was adopted, and my mother and I,
and my sister, we had tuberculosis.
And she took us
from this tiny village to the capital,
but not only to the capital,
to the hospital,
where she passed away, but we survived.
So that walk of 75 miles with two kids ...
TG: Little kids.
MS: Little kids.
I always ask myself, what did we eat?
And my sister and I,
we talked about this constantly.
She never thought about what we ate.
I say that because I think
our journeys as people,
even before we start thinking about it,
can have impact on food.
So I realized that, after asking a lot,
it must have been
this chickpea flour called shiro,
which is really a porridge.
So my journey on food
starts somewhere there,
on that walk from Abrugandana to Addis.
I think we had dried nuts,
chickpeas, dried injera,
all things that are great when you travel
and you can kind of just bring with you.
We would consider them snacks today,
but this is something
that you eat throughout the continent
as -- it could be your daily meal.
Once I got to Sweden, you know,
and I went -- just an eight-hour ride.
I went from being Kassahun Tsegie,
which is my birth name,
to Marcus Samuelsson.
I traded injera, shiro and berbere
for herring, salmon and mackerel.
I still don't know
which one I like the most.
But the big influence for me
on food was my grandmother.
And my mom was a decent cook,
but my grandmother was an amazing cook.
TG: Grandmother Helga.
MS: Helga. Absolutely.
And it wasn't just what we ate,
but it was how
she perceived the seasonality
and how a food existed in her space.
So there was always
a foraging season of something.
There was always
a pickling and preserving time.
TG: What did she preserve and pickle?
MS: Mushrooms. Herring.
Berries. Apple jam.
The plum was always --
The plum jam was always
by the plum that had fallen down.
“You’re a fool. You got to know this.”
That's what she told us.
You can't give away the plums
that have already fallen down.
They were for us for plum jam.
Something you had to know.
But the plums in the tree
that were really nice
you can give to the neighbor
over here, for example.
There were rules with what food
we gave away, what we kept.
So anyway, food existed at early days,
never around luxury,
but more around, this is what we do.
I don't remember buying a lot of food
with my grandmother.
Of course she went to the store,
but not with us.
Most of the time it was food that we made,
the craftsmanship around food.
TG: And it seems like
in the home of your grandparents,
there was also a deep respect for nature.
Right? Like they were living
deeply attached to the land.
Can you talk about that
in terms of the way you continue
to think about space and land?
MS: You know, the funny thing
with my grandparents,
Sweden wasn't directly involved
in the Second World War,
but it impacted it.
And they grew up very poor.
So all the things that we put
on our social media today,
"I'm going foraging upstate,"
or "I'm pickling and I'm doing this."
Those were necessities.
She didn't cure her salmon
because she thought it was a better taste.
She did it because she had to.
She didn't smoke her mackerel
because it was the new way to get a taste.
It was a necessity to keep it
three, four, five days longer.
That cod soup on the third day,
you know what I mean?
That was to stretch the meal.
So nature became the free
kind of whole food, if you want.
And if you didn't use it,
you weren't smart.
So just understanding food from that level
was not around restaurants.
It was always around just food
as something that was part
of what you did.
You know, then ...
Again, being adopted,
when you think about identity and food,
early on, all the food
that we had was Swedish food.
Coastal Swedish food,
because that's where we grew up.
Eventually, as I started to have
weekend jobs in restaurants,
it was kind of French Swedish food.
But my identity around where I was from
and where does
Ethiopian food fit into this
was kind of lost on me.
And I always, when I share identity
in conversations around other creatives,
chefs of color, artists of colors,
creators of colors,
the identity around
their own identity and the work,
it's almost always a search
where you kind of go in and out
of ideas that are traditional,
and how do you go back to your food.
Where do you see yourself in food?
And I never saw or had the conversation
around Black food
or the identity around it.
So for me, I went to art.
You know, my biggest, sort of,
idols at the time were Prince
and Jean-Michel Basquiat.
I was like, how can this young artist
live and exist in the world of art
and link street and gallery?
And that for me, if he could do it,
maybe one day I could do it in food.
TG: Right. As a chef.
So thinking about food memories,
I know you have some spice here.
Can you talk about, you know,
what it means to think about food
as a way that you understand your journey,
your identity?
MS: Mhm.
Well, I think when you think
about Black food,
particularly with the continent in mind,
it's almost three chapters.
The first chapter is the origin
where most of our food came from.
We were early on the continent of,
you know, trading food,
traveling with food.
A lot of the grains, like I have here --
I have teff, one of the oldest
grains in the world,
or fonio, for example -- old, old grains.
You think about things
like shiro, turmeric,
za'atar or berbere,
throughout the region of Africa
and northern Africa, East Africa.
Food in terms of -- it was currency.
Spices were currency.
These incredible markets
of Marrakech or Cairo,
these were trading places.
And so much of the identity
and so much of the food
came from the continent.
Then, when colonization happened,
all the great food
that comes from the continent,
we now have to start thinking about
through a European lens.
And this still sticks with us, right?
When we think about a great coffee,
we hear it through
a French roast or Italian roast
versus its origin
of Ethiopia, for example.
When we think about
a great Belgian chocolate, you know,
we don't think about it
that the cocoa bean is from Ghana.
It's not until the last five-ten years
where we're kind of reshaping that,
but obviously through
all things food today --
it's such a major machine,
it's such a major economy.
So over the last 100 years,
we’ve been taught that
the great chocolate comes from Belgium
and the great so-and-so comes from France.
Getting that identity back,
this is what I think
present and future work is about.
If we think about good food,
it has to be linked
to its origin, identity
and how do we rephrase this
and reshape this,
that the origin of the place
actually gets acknowledged.
And we're going to come back to that.
The other part that obviously
Black food from the continent
has gone through was --
You know, when I was growing up,
the way people talked
about food from Africa
was very often through famines.
So this identity around food
was just something
that we could help through aid.
It's not the only way, of course,
that we engage in food in Africa.
So it's all of this misconception
of one experience
that we as creatives, as chefs today,
almost have to share
and keep telling the story
in order so the value proposition
from the receiver, wherever they are,
sees this through the right lens.
But also in the continent.
Why would I go into food today
if there's no value proposition?
But if we value cocoa beans
and the value of a coffee farm,
that talent stays in the continent
and says, "Hey, this is as valuable
as working for Microsoft."
TG: Mhm. Mhm.
And it seems, you know, the name
of this talk today is "Food for Good."
But it seems that that narrative shift
has been a part of your work
as a chef from the beginning.
So how did you become a chef?
And maybe while we're saying that,
do you want to eat?
MS: Yeah. Let's bring in some food.
Yeah, absolutely.
TG: So I hope this audience --
I wish you all could smell
and see all that is here.
But, Marcus, let's talk
about what we're having.
MS: Well, we’re going to have --
a simple dish
that all hints and links back
to the continent.
And I think when you think
about modern Black
and modern food throughout the continent,
it will taste and look
something like this.
This is a restaurant food.
If you eat locally
anywhere on the continent,
it will be much more regional
and not so much fuss around it
the way we do as chefs.
But here you have a seared bass
that we dip in teff flour.
So again, the grain from Ethiopia.
But again just a light touch.
We use a fermented corn puree,
which is eaten all throughout Africa.
Whether you call it, you know,
you think about ugali in Kenya,
pap in South Africa,
or almost the way
we think about grits, right?
So corn is such a big key to us.
I'm just going to --
have a little nice salsa
that we use -- cucumber.
Simple textures.
In the salsa we have beautiful
couscous, right?
These are all things that --
why not throw in some fresh herbs on top,
and a little bit of berbere oil,
just to drizzle.
But again, always thinking about,
when I plate -- positive-negative space,
really creating these dramatic colors.
And, you know,
my Ethiopian family will be like,
"How come you don't put more
food on the plate? What is this?
What is this negative space for?"
But as we evolve
into modern, exciting food,
this is how --
If you go to Accra today,
Addis today, Lagos in a restaurant,
in a modern restaurant,
this is a similar dish
that you could smell, eat and taste.
Doesn't that look good?
TG: It's fantastic.
MS: Alright, you know what? That's yours.
That's for you. That's all you.
TG: Thank you.
So, Marcus, can you --
I want you to answer the question first
of how you became a chef.
But then I want you, as you've hinted,
and as I know this dish represents,
for you to talk about this idea
of modern Black and what that means.
But start with first
how you became a chef.
MS: Well,
I’ve only had two major passions
in my life: cooking and playing soccer.
And I was completely shocked
when I didn't become a soccer star.
But I took the same energy
of training and working hard
into the food game.
Thank you, thank you.
TG: It’s delicious.
MS: It’s good, right? Yeah.
A little fermented corn
with some couscous.
But I learned a lot of,
you know, around --
Being black in Sweden,
for me, the blessings of being Black
in Sweden were really about
clarity on my options.
Clarity of being a kid that had to
pursue excellence right away.
It gave me clarity.
When my other co-chefs signed out,
I'm like, I'm not even started yet.
So that clarity gave me experiences,
and I got scholarships early on.
I traveled to Japan,
just lived with a family.
I didn't know what umami was,
which you have umami in this dish,
until I went to Japan.
I got a scholarship to live
in Switzerland for two years.
Completely game-changing experience,
operating food at a hotel
in French and German,
and being 19, 20 years old.
So I was like, "Oh, I belong."
Once I knew that I could do this abroad
on multiple languages,
I'm like, let's go three-star Michelin.
And it took me a year to get to France,
to a three-star Michelin restaurant,
outside Lyon, Georges Blanc,
and I realized, like,
this is going to be my life.
But I noticed
there were Japanese kids there working,
there were mostly European kids,
even some South Americans.
But no Black.
And anywhere -- from dining room
to in the kitchen. Nowhere.
TG: So front of the house,
in the kitchen -- no.
MS: None. So for me,
it was really about --
where do I fit into this, as a young kid?
And it was very clear.
It told me that --
you know, one day my chef said,
"What do you want to do?"
I said, "I want to open
a restaurant such as yours."
And he just looked at me and said,
"It's not possible.
There will never be a restaurant
owned by a Black person
with those ambitions
supported by a customer."
And I said, "Well, I can't lower
my dream or ambition."
He said, "I don't know what to tell you.
You can work in a restaurant,
but can never own one."
And that jump-off point
really became a driving force
for me to leave,
and eventually come
to the United States and New York City,
and who knew what would happen,
but I just knew that I could add value.
I've proven it to myself and to my family.
And that's how I got to New York.
TG: Mhm. Mhm.
And when you got to New York,
in many ways,
that seems to be also where you began
thinking about the kind of food journey
and the food stories,
and the food narratives
that you wanted to be involved with.
I've always imagined deeply
the way in which you represent hybridity
in such a fantastic way.
You think about the ways
in which you have brought
the many pieces of your life
and your culture together in food,
but also the way you've been curious,
in traveling the world,
to see and engage with food.
So can you talk about hybridity
as a way to talk about
your concept of modern Black
and the way in which
it’s evidenced in these plates?
Tell us about --
MS: Well, when I got to New York,
I was also extremely fortunate
because --
I was cooking and met
other Black creatives.
And little did I know
that these creatives would be, you know,
icons in their industry
15, 20 years later or ten years later.
And to have the opportunity
to be inspired and break bread,
and drinks with people like --
Meeting Julie Mehretu, fellow Ethiopian.
Being an artist, young artist,
in the mid-90s,
having the opportunity to talk to you.
Meeting people like Sanford Biggers.
They weren't in my field,
but they were on a journey
and they were never
linear with their work.
I remember a night with Sanford.
He's like, "I just came back from Russia."
I've been to Russia.
"I went to Japan."
Well, I worked in Japan.
And he did it as an artist.
And his work, coming back,
with these incredible trees,
and it was his true
Black version of himself,
but through a lens that was worldly.
And wait a minute.
I as another Black person
that is not linear, is not --
It's my version.
And meeting people
that have had similar journeys,
but yet very different,
in different expressions,
just inspired me so much.
But also being around music,
like being around, you know,
Tribe Called Quest, for example.
You know, Jarobi that was in the band,
then left the band for cooking.
So being around these people
that were similar in age,
doing, talking about a modern Blackness
that obviously had roots in Africa,
but also in the migration,
but also in music and art,
almost combining.
What would that taste like?
And coming to America where you thought,
you were told all Black food
was southern food,
what we know as soul food,
and I love southern food.
But it wasn't the only story
that we could tell, right?
When I went to a Haitian restaurant
that I loved in Brooklyn,
there was djon djon rice,
there were pikliz.
When I went to a Jamaican restaurant,
there were these incredible foods,
like ackee and jerk,
not telling the story of the migration.
And I loved both.
So being here in New York showed me
that Blackness doesn't have to be one way.
Yet through food,
the way the media received it,
they wanted to see us through one way,
which is very often that when you
don't have a majority culture,
you can accept a minority culture
through one lens.
TG: Mhm.
Right. Tell us about this dish.
MS: Well, I think
one of my favorite things to eat
is beef tartare.
The beef tartare of this dish
has really origin
in my wife's tribe Gurage,
where you make a warm beef tartare.
And --
this is really what you have here.
It's a warm beef tartare
with some fresh cheese,
some pickled onions
and dried injera bread again.
So we're just going to have you --
taste that with
a little more berbere oil.
And --
Food, modern food to me
should be both tribal and modern.
TG: Why?
MS: Because that’s how we live
our lives today.
When you think about identity culture,
you can't talk about the continent
not thinking about tribes.
The tribes are kind of the base.
And then art, music, dance, spirituality,
it comes out of that.
You can be one tribe
and you can have many spiritualities.
But in terms of dress code, food, culture,
how you celebrate weddings --
are all done through that structure.
So I'm very much inspired
by the tribalism in Africa.
It doesn't behold me
to one is better than other.
But when I ask a fellow African,
where are you from?
And he or she might say
Nigeria or, let's say, Senegal.
Second question is: what tribe?
If I were to ask a European person,
like, where are you from?
Say, England.
OK, then I would ask: what city?
Maybe third, I would ask,
what soccer team do you like?
Which is a form of tribalism.
But when it comes to the continent,
the tribe directs so much what we eat,
when we eat it and how we celebrate it.
So that's kind of the core here with work
of this festive dish out of the Gurage.
And then we bring in the --
these chips do not exist that way.
So they're long. They're static.
TG: Can you talk about these chips?
Because I think that's, you know,
a perfect example
of the kind of hybridity.
So you're interest in teff
that then has led to a thinking
about how to use it,
both in ways that honor
their tradition culturally,
but also make it new.
MS: It's --
One other thing you have to be
as a Black creative,
you have to be your own cheerleader,
your own Flavor Flav.
Because there's nothing out there
to tell you you're heading
in the right direction.
When you see terms,
"I just had this great Italian dish,"
or, you know, "The way they do
their French cooking over there
is amazing."
We don't have those reference points
coming to us through media.
So you have to actually
create it yourself.
And sometimes you don't know
if you're in the right direction,
so then you have to create this friendship
and colleagues that are really helping
and part of the editing process.
But when I eat teff
from the most sour fresh form,
I always think about,
what would this be like, dried.
And then you start seeing
teff chips coming up,
like, what if I stretch this?
What if this looks a little bit more
like an Alvin Ailey show.
Like the way the ballerinas stretch.
What if I would look at the structure
of a Julie Mehretu painting,
where it's, like, stretched, you know?
So this is kind of the duality.
When I listen to Burna Boy,
or when I listen to, let's say, Fela Kuti,
I --
see the linkage together.
It's not so much one was done
in the 80s or 70s
and one is done in the 2020s.
It's I hear the tonality
of both, the linkage.
Same thing with food.
And that's why music and art
is such a good guidance for me.
Because art, great art,
it's past, present, future.
Great music, it's past, present, future.
And with food, if we don't know our past,
how are we going to know
if it's delicious or not?
How are we going to know
the reference point?
We know this in French cooking
and in Italian cooking,
but we don't know that
about the continent.
And that's what we're here to unlock.
And how would you know what's good food
if you don't even know
the past and the present?
TG: So let's talk about Food for Good.
What does that mean for you,
and why is that such
an animating sort of idea
in the work that you are doing,
in your own artistry as a chef,
in the restaurants
that you’ve created, in the world,
and the ways that I know
you're interacting
in thoughts around the future of food
and the ways in which we understand them.
MS: Well there's several.
The first is I want young Africans to feel
like this is a field you can go into.
This is a field that has value.
This is not just a labor
of anonymous laborers
where there's no value proposition
on the other end.
So if you're a young cook
in Uganda, Ethiopia, Nigeria,
this is a field that -- we got you.
And there's an arch.
And here's what these traits looked like.
But on the other hand, too,
is what can we from the West
learn from the continent,
eating based on a spiritual compass,
knowing how sometimes to fast,
holding off certain animal protein.
Thinking about how to break fast.
How do we celebrate that?
These are all things that we need.
I mean, we have the crisis here
in terms of, you think about
eating too much red meat,
we're thinking about, you know,
green and the environment.
So we are all collectively
in need for eating better
and having better systems within food.
That is all linkage.
Both for the environment,
but also for our own body and health.
So much of the world's
superfood is in Africa.
We talked about fonio and teff,
but there are many:
amaranth, moringa and so on.
So with everything else,
with technology
or with other modernity,
we go into depth of finding the origin,
honoring the origin,
and then that forms us to move forward.
In food, we have taken food from Africa
without actually paying
enough respect and tribute back.
And why should anyone
value their land and properties
when there's no value proposition
on growing these things?
Even in the most high-tech food
we can think about today,
let's just think about
something like a Beyond Burger
or Impossible Burger.
Well, a lot of those modern patties
are based with chickpeas.
Well, Africa got some of the largest,
it's one of the best places
in the world with chickpeas.
So if you're a chickpea farmer
today in Africa
and living off two dollars a day,
to get the right value proposition
off your teff, off your chickpeas,
maybe you can live on 20 dollars a day.
Doesn't sound like a lot,
but it's game-changing for that family.
So there's a value proposition
in all the different steps,
but it's also something here
that we can learn.
We want to pay the right price.
We're talking about that constantly here.
We want to make sure
that we honor where it comes from.
And we also want to eat
gooder, more delicious.
And we don't know how delicious it is
until we kind of go through
all the options and how it got to us.
TG: Your work has been a lot about
just opening people to new flavors
and allowing, in your restaurants,
you're constantly experimenting
in bringing these flavors
from Africa, from the world,
you know, in these
incredible collisions often.
And that's where for me, it always seems
the base of your artistry is.
Being able to sort of think about
how to put things together.
MS: Yeah.
TG: Why?
MS: Um.
First of all, I think
I've been extremely blessed
by having, you know,
my family and mentors around me.
Family members,
non-family members that said,
"Hey, you know what?
We're going to bet on you."
And I met some of the most
amazing people in food,
like Leah Chase, that broke barriers
when it comes to dining in America.
Color barriers.
And when you meet someone like Leah,
that own Dooky Chase in New Orleans,
only been in business for 83 years
and still going,
it wasn't so much about the food.
I mean, her restaurant
is really about -- is a gathering spot.
But civil rights movements,
opportunities like myself
being here in this country,
that opens opportunities
for Black chefs across the world.
So if I've got an opportunity
to travel and live out my dream,
I have to kind of bring people
into this space
and open up other opportunities.
So food -- I think food
can get even better
if you invite more people to the party.
For so many years, a chef had to come
from France or cook French food.
It had to be a man
and sometimes, almost always angry.
Well, that's a small, slim space
to look at greatness.
Why not open it up?
I love food and I love dining,
so why not open up the door and make it
more inspiring for a larger scale?
You think about the World Cup
or you think about big things
that we want to celebrate, NBA,
it's better because
of the larger pie as part of it,
not better because it's narrower.
So I love food, I love my trade,
and I know we can do better.
So when I have an opportunity
to open a Red Rooster or Hav and Mar,
open kitchens, closeness
to the guests and who cooks it.
If the customer wants to come up
and talk about, you know,
what they liked and didn't like,
if they want to create
this close relationship with the chef,
watching a chef on a journey,
like we have here,
incredible Fariyal that,
you know, origin in Ethiopia,
but also lived in America for a long time.
If you want to talk to her,
well, she's right there.
Before, when I started,
kitchen was this hole
that you were never supposed to peek into.
And it was anonymous label.
Same thing at Red Rooster.
It's an open space that --
it's a back and forth --
that you can have a dialogue.
And I think that food gets better
the more people lean in,
not better because it's held
in a certain zip code.
TG: Mhm.
And so really I want to ask you about --
you have restaurants all around the world.
But I know Harlem
is very close to your heart.
Close to our heart.
And so can you talk about
the inspiration that Harlem is for you?
MS: Harlem is truly everything.
I think about Harlem
as the Black Mecca for culture.
It's the place where,
if you're an author in South Africa,
you want to come to Schomburg
or have a dialogue with the Studio Museum
to show your work.
If you're a singer, you know,
like Tems in Nigeria, or for the world,
she's going to come
to the Apollo and perform.
So it becomes really through its history
and generations of intellectuals,
and incredible people
like James Baldwin and Maya Angelou,
and the list goes on and on.
And the other thing that Harlem has,
institutions do matter.
We have them both
in people and in buildings.
Just within a five-minute walk
or ten-minute walk
you can go from the Abyssinia to YMCA,
to Schomburg, to Apollo,
to the Studio Museum.
But you also meet the people
that work in there.
So all of the people of Harlem,
the institutions, informed me, really,
before I got to Harlem,
like, this is a great place.
This is where great
Black culture comes from.
And now it's our job
to take that to the next level,
to both aspire and inspire
the next generation.
And there's a Harlem everywhere:
in Berlin, in Cape Town.
And some places are obvious,
but there's also a Harlem in Tokyo.
There's also a Black
identity in São Paulo,
in these cultures where we think about it,
or in Mexico,
but sometimes also
where we don't think about it
because there's people of color
that have creative, of course, ambitions,
but they need a focal place to see,
where can I show and tell?
And Harlem is that place for me.
TG: Mhm. I could keep talking
and keep eating,
but I want to get to some of the questions
that this incredible audience
has offered here.
I'm just going to move this
over a little bit. OK.
George would love to know
how your philosophy differs
or has similarities
with the Slow Food movement.
MS: I think there's a lot of crossover
and a lot of the people
that I admire, like Aliya, for example,
were part of the Slow Food
movement when it started.
And I think that we,
they're all about figuring out
originality and broadcasting that,
an identity around food,
and broadcasting that
to a larger audience.
Because if you think
about Native American culture,
if you think about
native culture from Africa
or native culture from South America,
there's a lot of incredible cooking
and pickling, and preserving,
and nature-driven things
that we still actually
trade off from today,
whether it's barbecuing,
whether it's smoking,
or whether it's jerk,
that we still work off today,
but we're not giving
enough credit to the origin.
Why should that be, you know --
TG: Authorship.
MS: Authorship.
Who gets to tell that story,
who gets to share that story.
Authorship, right?
We live in a time of AI
where you can search for all that stuff.
But if we don't talk about that
and document that,
it will never show up on AI,
and therefore what people
are going to think about
as the most reliable place
is not reliable.
So I think it's having
these incredible, respectful,
but also past, present,
future-looking organizations.
It's important that we do bring up
origin, authorship, identity,
because if you don't have
value around that,
why should the next generation opt in?
There's so many things
you can be part of. Why food?
And we have to make our case
and make it much more inclusive.
So we get --
to become a place that strives
and people feel like, I’m part of that.
I want to be part.
There's a place there for me.
TG: And they want to be in it
in ways that are positive.
MS: Absolutely.
TG: Here is a question,
one here, from Les.
"I have a nine-year-old daughter,
and we have an amazing variety
of foods where we live in Uganda.
What do you advise as a good way
to build a healthy life and diet
for her as she grows?"
And I know you have some
very deep personal experience with this.
MS: First of all, I see you Uganda,
I know ugali, we just talked about it,
second time we talk about ugali here.
That's amazing.
Which is one of the staples
in Uganda and Tanzania, and Kenya as well.
I think if you can, variety of your food.
So bringing in seafood
when you can to that diet,
bringing in a blend
between animal proteins,
so it's like, it's not just red meat,
it’s not just meat that
has been braised for a long time.
So you have different types
of cooking methods that goes into that.
And of course, vegetables and grains.
You know, having --
like a couscous salad that we --
or a cracked wheat salad
that you bring in tons of vegetables into.
So I think the variety of your diet,
and then maybe, you know,
I think the key for me
is really flexitarian,
where you are vegetarian-leaning,
and maybe bring in meat
two days, three days tops a week.
TG: But how would you do that?
Like with her nine-year-old?
How do you do that with children?
MS: There's no age limit
to that, you know.
Trust me, Zion and I, and even Grace --
My son Zion is seven, almost eight.
TG: And your daughter?
MS: Daughter Grace, we cook all the time,
and very often it starts with "no."
But what Zion loves
is going with me to the market
and picking out ingredients.
So really bringing in the children
early in the process.
Maybe two days before
you're going to cook, on a Thursday,
I say, "On Saturday
we're going to go to the market,
and we're going to meet Jim, our fish guy,
and he sometimes
throws in an extra piece of fish.
Could be swordfish. Oh how exciting."
So it's not on Saturday at 9 o'clock
because that might be too early.
It's really about building
the week around that.
Or if we go upstate, you know what?
The pumpkin growers are amazing.
And really talking about it early.
You got to make food cool to any age.
Whether you're a child
or someone working in an office,
you got to find a way to engage,
and really talk to your children about it,
and not just presenting the food,
cooking the food --
include them in the process.
TG: Mhm. Thank you.
This is from Dana.
We're sitting in Hav and Mar.
And the question is, "How do you create
the vibe in all of your restaurants?
There's always a good vibe
in a Marcus Samuelsson restaurant."
MS: Well.
I would say one of the great things
about Black culture and African culture
is that regardless of the moment,
the energy is always high.
It's always lit.
Whether -- you know, if you've never
been to a funeral in Africa,
it's hard but it's always through music.
So that level of joy,
that is truly in and of Black culture.
You see it in our music,
see it in our culture.
That's something I want
to share with our audience.
It's not just for -- its of Black culture,
but it's for everyone.
When you enter the space of Red Rooster,
it's a celebration of --
Maybe you weren't welcome at other places.
Maybe you had the question,
will there be Black people
seated at the table?
Will there be a Black server?
All those silent questions that we,
Black professionals ask ourselves.
Will this server come to my table?
None of that will happen
at our restaurant.
You are here as a guest
and we're going to celebrate you.
We start that off with high-level energy,
because this might be the only time
you come to one of our restaurants,
we want you to have that experience.
So that is baked in the cake,
have to be --
TG: For all the spaces you create.
MS: All the spaces. Absolutely.
TG: How do you start the process
of thinking about how you get to that?
MS: Well, I’m very slow in my process.
You know, Red Rooster took eight years.
Hav and Mar took four years,
which was fast.
But it starts very often through artists,
you know, like here we have
the luxury to talk to you,
but also through
our dear friend Derrick Adams
that has made these bespoke,
incredible Black mermaids work here.
And Derrick and I, we stood here,
in an empty location here in New York,
and we talked about water --
I knew that was an important part --
and the dual identity, Nordic and Africa,
and he came back and said,
it should be about Black mermaids.
Once he had the mermaids,
then that decided the shape.
It wasn't just Derek hanging his art.
Derek's identity and his thought process
around the mermaid
has been the leading force of creativity
for us as a restaurant.
So going into space,
knowing that you don't have
all the answers,
but working with incredible,
talented people
that think about it from a different lens,
but with a similar goal.
TG: So real collaboration
in creating that.
MS: Real collaboration, yes.
TG: Yeah. So from Fernando,
"How can chefs navigate
the delicate balance
between culinary innovation
and cultural preservation,
especially in light of controversy
surrounding the interpretation
and adaptation of traditional
dishes by foreign chefs?"
MS: I think that, first of all,
an amazing question.
Very hard space.
I think that when you create,
you have to separate
home food, traditional food,
and restaurant food.
You have to think
about restaurant as Broadway.
You're putting on a show.
You're coming from a place
that the chef
and that restaurant's identity
decides where you're
going to go in this play.
A restaurant is a gathering spot
where you're talking about
what you've been inspired by,
what do you want to share.
It's not a place à la a museum
or a library where you're
kind of trying to preserve and present.
It could be,
but the restaurants
in the way I think about it,
it's not from
the authentic point of view
of only originality.
I want to respect where it came from,
but I also want to show,
we are going through this process.
That's why I talk a lot
about Black modern.
It's not a place where it's only backward.
That's why I think music is so amazing
because it allows us to see a new version,
hear new versions.
It's still of the continent,
it's still of Black creatives.
And music throughout
has helped us to understand this.
You know, like you think
about gospel to jazz, to R&B,
to funk, to hip-hop, to Afrobeat.
It's all sounds
that come out of Black culture,
that is out of joy
and out of all the moments sometimes
when we go through tough times.
But it guides us through
and I think the same with food.
But there is evolution --
and it's almost like
a five- to a ten-year peg around that.
Same with food. We evolve.
We can be both tribal and tech.
We can be --
because I feel like
as a Black, modern individual
living in the world,
living as close to Addis,
Stockholm, Frankfurt to New York.
It's not --
When we present our restaurant
in Addis, on the 47th floor --
TG: Which opened when?
MS: In November of 2023.
It was never about serving
traditional Ethiopian food.
That building by itself is such a beacon.
So it's really telling Ethiopia,
here's where we're going,
and you are part of this journey.
And the young chefs
cooking in this kitchen,
they are also part of that journey.
Come back three years later,
you're going to see them out in the world.
TG: Thank you.
From Patrick, "What's your basic rule
for how to combine
the breadth of ingredients
to end up with an interesting meal."
MS: Well, I think it's not
about forcing the interesting.
It's really -- one of the beauty
of being a chef is that the craftsmanship,
just the basic fundamental,
takes a long time.
And that's the beauty,
because you have to do it a lot.
Once you have the basic
fundamental of cooking,
now you can mix and match
the way you understood,
which is both traditional
and has a level of uniqueness.
But without having that --
that's why I feel sorry for young chefs
that are so fast,
just want to push through it.
That's not where the great craftsmanship
is going to come from.
It's going to come from repetition.
You know, when you look
at amazing artists,
even amazing filmmakers,
some of the best work
is somewhere between 70 and 80.
You know, you think about Scorsese
still making incredible movies.
And I look at amazing artists.
It’s not because how fast you’re
running when you do it,
the better you get at your craft.
So for me, it's about being passionate
and being fascinated
at the craft at the same time.
Through the blend of passion
and fascination you will evolve.
And if you evolve, great stuff will come.
If you only want to get there fast,
you can have hits
and it could work for a moment.
But you have to constantly
fall in love with your craft.
Constantly be curious
about yourself and the craft,
and the team that you want
to kind of build around you.
And I, you know --
my father was a tribe leader in Ethiopia,
watching him engaging with the tribe,
not understanding the language,
but understanding how,
watching how he moved people,
fascinating to me.
TG: Yeah.
Yes.
How do you -- from Kat.
"How do you define your personality
through your dishes?"
MS: I don't think there's separation.
I mean, I'm the most fluent
when you taste my food.
But I never were -- maybe it's because
I've been an immigrant six times.
Language. I always mix them up.
Sometimes it could be German.
Sometimes it could be Swedish.
Sometimes it could be English, of course.
But if you want to know
who I am, taste the food.
TG: I think also, if I might answer this,
I think your dishes also give us a view
into the different aspects
of your journey.
MS: Yes.
TG: In different moments
in the decades that I've known you.
Your interest in certain ingredients,
in dishes you've made
really have been an indication of a moment
where you've been exploring and investing,
thinking about the past,
but also thinking very much
about the future.
You know, I think now,
some of these plates
remind me a little bit,
of maybe a hint of something
that you made 20 years ago.
But then I also know it's a hint
of something you're going to make
20 years from now.
MS: Oh, absolutely.
And that's the joy of being in a place
where you can trust the craftsmanship,
but also being introduced
to new things and new ways.
When I go to the continent of Africa,
I'm still learning
how to eat in a new way.
Like if you speak to anyone
from Ghana or Nigeria,
even more Nigeria than Ghana,
I would say, swallow.
Swallow is a whole way of eating
that is so clear
to anyone that is Nigerian.
And if you don't know how to do it,
people are going to laugh at you
and talk to you about it at the table.
I learned that maybe at 35,
and I've been cooking and I was like,
what if swallow
would have been from France?
It would have been something
we've been taught in cooking schools.
So again, like,
food, dining culture
has so much breadth and depth.
You know, we learned
how to eat with chopsticks
when Japanese food
became popular to the world.
So there's still new ways of eating,
not just new ways of cooking.
And I can't wait.
TG: To see some of those emerge.
Yeah. Alright.
We have time for a few more questions.
There's so many great questions here,
and I want to thank everyone
for these fantastic questions.
Someone asked, "I love how you mentioned
that cooking is an art.
What are your must-have tools
as an artist chef you can't live without?"
And I'm not sure if this question
are meant quite literally tools,
but I'm going to say any tools,
not just the literal tools of cooking,
but what tools can't you live without?
MS: I think they're
very different for each chef.
For me, it’s really about
protecting your sense of flavors.
So for me, I'm very sort of
cautious about what I eat.
Like for example, I would never smoke.
Not because I think
people who smoke are bad people.
It's just I protect my sense of flavor.
TG: So that's a tool.
MS: No, no, it's the tool. Right?
Being curious.
The day I stop thinking about food
in a very primal sense,
the day I don't enjoy that,
I should quit.
So keeping that,
those are tools for me that are --
you have to keep the joy in there
and you have to be curious,
but you also have to protect your body
in a sense that you can't
operate on that high level.
Right? Yeah.
Iron-cast pan -- great.
Great with a good spatula.
When I look at the great cooks
that I've been around,
Leah, my grandmother --
they were never defined by the tools.
When I go to Ethiopia and we run,
even if we send tons of shoes,
the kids never wear the shoes
because they protect them
for good days, not running.
And I got my new Nike's, Adidas, whatever,
and still they're like
30 yards ahead of me.
And looking back,
it's like, are you coming?
It's never, for me, about the tools.
TG: It's more talent than tools.
MS: And it's also
the love of the craft.
So for a home cook,
eat your food,
eat out,
and keep that love of curiosity,
and stay hungry.
TG: Alright, for our last question,
I know there are so many more
that we all want to ask,
but tell us what food, ingredients,
cuisine is inspiring you now.
What would you send us all
to think about, look at and taste?
MS: I would say,
wherever you are in the world,
support your local Black restaurant.
Follow a chef of color
in your neighborhood
or outside your neighborhood.
Because through that lens
you will learn new things.
And it doesn't matter
if you're of color or not
because if you want to know
about the mystic,
about djon djon from Haiti,
it's not going to be through
that major platform that you read it.
It might be through that local restaurant,
and you are missing out
if you have not had djon djon.
If you want to know about what's happening
in the underbelly of cooking,
that then becomes the pop culture,
follow the chefs in your community,
support them.
You know, Chef Maame,
there was a line cook with us
for years at Red Rooster,
she moved back to Ghana
in order to come back
and start a food conference
called Black Women in Food in DC --
sold out, by the way --
today is coming back
to Red Rooster to do a pop-up.
Now that 360 for me of her coming back,
I mean lived in Harlem
in Little West Africa, as we call it,
on the 116 Street on the West Side,
working at Red Rooster,
taking that experience, going back,
opening a restaurant
where former Rooster staff
had actually worked in,
and then coming back to America
through a conference that she created,
and in order then tonight to do a pop-up,
that for me is truly understanding
connectivity.
Watching her evolve as a great chef
and as a contributor in the food space,
that is really what inspires me
and keeps me going.
Things like that. Chefs like Maame.
TG: Yeah. Well, I think
in many cases that's possible
because of the inspiration
you've given so many chefs
to understand how
they can root in culture,
how they can use their ancestry,
the places they are from,
the places they've been as inspiration,
and also bring some of the many ways
in which our cultures show up
into the space of restaurants.
I mean, you know, so much of your work
has provided that path for so many.
So what's a word of inspiration
that you give to young chefs?
What would you say to them?
MS: Absolutely.
TG: As a way to give them the charge.
Because your inspiration, of course,
was instigated by someone
saying to you, you cannot do this.
And here we are now, you know,
after decades,
where you have done this to --
you know, James Beard Awards,
and a memoir, and TV shows,
and restaurants around the world,
and cooking for presidents and musicians,
and, you know, the whole world --
MS: And art curators as well.
TG: And art curators as well.
And you've done this
so deeply throughout the world.
What would you say to a young person now
who comes and says, how do I do this?
MS: A, welcome to our community.
You will always be busy.
Stay curious.
Learn the craft. Learn the craft.
Keep cooking, keep cooking.
And then -- I literally, like I mean it --
stay hungry.
Write your food.
Both write your food and cook your food.
Even at its worst stage,
it's a starting point.
I've written so many,
I cooked so many bad dishes
before I get to the good dishes.
So for me, it's really
understanding the past
and learn the history,
learn the craft,
keep cooking and stay curious.
Because if you do all that,
somewhere you will learn about yourself
and the joy of breaking bread,
and the joy of doing bad dishes.
Because if you do ten bad dishes,
that 11th time,
that might be a great dish.
TG: I think that's a great metaphor
for any creative pursuit.
The ability to stay curious, stay hungry,
keep allowing oneself
the opportunity for failure.
Because, as you say, that 11th dish,
that 11th try is then where the joy is.
Marcus, thank you so much.
MS: Thank you so much.
TG: Not only for this fantastic meal,
this fantastic conversation,
but also for the great opportunity
you've given us all
to learn so much about food and culture.
MS: And I want to say thank you
to Thelma Golden
for being here, as always,
here at Hav and Mar,
but literally here for us
in the TED community.
And thank you to the TED audience
for giving us this platform.
We really appreciate it.
And I'll see you here
at Hav and Mar, or at Red Rooster,
or anywhere where our paths may cross.
Thank you so much for having us.
And stay hungry.
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