"Yes Chef" a memoir:by Marcus Samuelsson. One boy and his sister were born in Ethiopia's capital city of Addis Adaba. When their mother dies of tuberculosis, the girl and boy are sent to live in Sweden with a new family. From there, the boy:Marcus would make a life for himself as a chef in all parts of the world:including New York. He begins by studying at the Culinary Institute in Gothenburg, Sweden.
One of Samuelson's dreams was to cook in a french restaurant. He sent many letters and requests for positions in France. Then finally, he received a reply that their may be an opening for a chef. When he takes an hour long train ride to France he is turned away three times by a worker who says that the chef is not available. When he finally is met by the chef, he is turned away because of the color of his skin. And he is not even offered shelter for the night in exchange for one days' labor.
I liked when Samuelsson knew he was successful in the restaurant business, when his restaurant "Aquavit" in New York, received three stars. You know when your restaurant is good, he says, when your reservations are all filled up, when your getting flowers and food from supporters. Getting three or more stars is like the the Academy Awards. You know when your successful, he continues, when Swedish chefs are asking to work at your restaurant.
It wasn't all sunshine and roses for Samuelson's, when Samuelsson opens a restaurant in Minneapolis (the author of this blogs hometown!!). The restaurant, Aquavit is forced to close.
"How the hell does a Swedish American restaurant fail in a Swedish American Heartland, we would move on, that was the one thing I knew how to do" Samuelsson says.(Global Dig)