

He’s one of the most audaciously openhearted and honest humans you’ll ever find. “David Chang is one of the most beloved chefs on earth, but his inspiring memoir is not just for foodies.

“An honest and vulnerable autobiography that will have you laughing and crying at the same time. Eat a Peach is an honest, ugly, raw dish of a book.” -The Wall Street Journal “With humor, pathos and heaping spoonsful of self-deprecation. Along the way, Chang gives us a penetrating look at restaurant life, in which he balances his deep love for the kitchen with unflinching honesty about the industry’s history of brutishness and its uncertain future. He wrestles with his lifelong feelings of otherness and inadequacy, explores the mental illness that almost killed him, and finds hope in the shared value of deliciousness. He lays bare his mistakes and wonders about his extraordinary luck as he recounts the improbable series of events that led him to the top of his profession. While teaching English in a backwater town, he experienced the highs of his first full-blown manic episode, and began to think that the cooking and sharing of food could give him both purpose and agency in his life.įull of grace, candor, grit, and humor, Eat a Peach chronicles Chang’s switchback path. Graduating college aimless and depressed, he fled the States for Japan, hoping to find some sense of belonging.

It would have been impossible to know it at the time-and certainly Chang would have bet against himself-but he, who had failed at almost every endeavor in his life, was about to become one of the most influential chefs of his generation, driven by the question, “What if the underground could become the mainstream?”Ĭhang grew up the youngest son of a deeply religious Korean American family in Virginia. Its young chef-owner, David Chang, worked the line, serving ramen and pork buns to a mix of fellow restaurant cooks and confused diners whose idea of ramen was instant noodles in Styrofoam cups. In 2004, Momofuku Noodle Bar opened in a tiny, stark space in Manhattan’s East Village.

ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR: NPR, Fortune, Parade, The New York Public Library, Garden & Gun From the chef behind Momofuku and star of Netflix’s Ugly Delicious-an intimate account of the making of a chef, the story of the modern restaurant world that he helped shape, and how he discovered that success can be much harder to understand than failure.
