Most of us probably wouldn’t know who Marcus Samuelsson was
if it weren’t for his celebrity created on the Food Channel’s Chopped and Bravo’s Top Chef and Top Chef Masters.
Yes, he is the youngest chef ever to receive a three-star review in The New York Times (from food critic and
author Ruth Reichel), and he has won the cooking equivalent of an Academy Award
(the prestigious James Beard Award), but it’s his appearances on television
that have made his life of interest to non-foodies.
I was initially curious about Samuelsson (pictured) because his
ethnicity seemed out of place in the culinary world. Name five famous black
chefs. Name five famous chefs from Ethiopia (Samuelsson’s country of origin) or
Sweden (his country of upbringing). Name two. Therein lies the intrigue about
this interesting character and his very interesting background. 
Samuelsson’s story begins in Ethiopia where he, at the age
of 3, his mother and older sister, all of them sick with tuberculosis and too
poor to afford transportation, walk 75 miles in the desert to a hospital in
Addis Ababa. I was immediately struck by the determination and courage it must
have taken his mother to do that. I can’t imagine being healthy and walking 75
miles with two healthy children. In fact, Marcus’ mother, 28, died within days
of arriving at the hospital, but her children survived because of her
sacrifice. Click on Read More Below...



