Susur_Lee

Susur Lee

Susur Lee

Canadian chef (born 1958)


Susur Lee (Chinese: 李國緯; born December 1958)[1] is a Canadian celebrity chef based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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Culinary career

Susur was born in Hong Kong, the youngest of six children. He served his culinary apprenticeship at Hong Kong's Peninsula Hotel. He immigrated to Canada in 1978 and met and married his first wife, Marilou Covey, the same year. In 1983, Susur and Marilou had decided to move to Hong Kong, but Marilou died as a passenger aboard Korean Air Lines Flight 007, which was destroyed by a Soviet jet fighter.[2] Susur married Brenda Bent in 1991, with whom he has three children: Kai, Levi, and Jet.[3]

Susur worked his way to executive chef status at a number of restaurants and eventually became an entrepreneur. His eclectic culinary style is described as fusion cuisine. He is especially well known for "Singapore Slaw", his take on a Lo Hei salad, which is traditionally eaten during the Lunar New Year.

Susur was a finalist in the second season of the Bravo TV show Top Chef: Masters, finishing in a tie for second behind winner Marcus Samuelsson. He has made guest appearances on numerous television cooking shows, and was the second Canadian chef (after Rob Feenie) to appear on the Food Network's Iron Chef America.

Susur's career includes being a chef at numerous Toronto dining establishments, judging culinary events, appearing on many food and wine television shows and owning/managing popular restaurants in Canada, United States and Singapore. Lotus, his first restaurant, opened in Toronto in 1987. He owns and manages Susur Lee Restaurant Group.[4]

Social media

Susur is featured in TikTok videos produced by his son Jet, as part of a recurring series where he "turns various foods gourmet".[5][6][7] He also owns the YouTube channel "Iron Chef Dad" with various food-related videos, that also frequently feature his son.[8]

Awards

Susur's awards include the CAA Five Diamond Award, Cannes, France; the American Academy of Hospitality Services' 5 Diamond Award (selected as one of the "World's Best Chefs") and being named one of the "Ten Chefs of the Millennium" by Food & Wine. In 2017 he was given "Canada's Best 100 Lifetime Achievement Award".[9] In 2015, Susur was one of the recipients of the 2015 Top 25 Canadian Immigrant Awards presented by Canadian Immigrant Magazine.[10]

Current restaurants

  • Lee, Toronto (owner and chef), 2004 – present
  • Tung Lok Heen (formerly Chinois), Singapore (owner and chef), 2010–present
  • Lee Kitchen, Toronto Pearson International Airport, 2015–present
  • Kid Lee, Toronto (owner and chef), 2018–2020

Past restaurant affiliations

  • Luckee (Chinese: 祿記),[11] Toronto (owner and chef), 2014–December 2018
  • Fring's, Toronto (co-owner rapper Drake), 2015–2018
  • Bent, Toronto (owner and chef), 2012–2017
  • Zentan at the Donovan House, Washington, D.C. (owner and chef), 2009–2013
  • Shang, New York (owner and chef), 2008–2011
  • Madeline's, Toronto (owner and chef), 2008–2010
  • Susur, Toronto (owner and chef), 2000–2008
  • Prague Fine Food Emporium, Toronto, 1998
  • Ritz-Carlton, Singapore (consulting chef), 1997
  • Kojis Kaizen, Montreal
  • Hemispheres, Toronto (consulting chef)
  • Oceans, 1990
  • Lotus, Toronto (owner and chef), 1987-1997
  • La Bastille, Toronto (guest chef), 1987
  • Lela, Toronto (chef or executive chef)
  • Peter Pan, Toronto (chef or executive chef)
  • Le Trou Normand, Toronto
  • Le Connaisseur, Toronto
  • The Westbury Hotel, Toronto (cook)
  • Peninsula Hotel, Hong Kong (apprentice/commis)

Book

TV appearances

Controversy

In 2007, the Ontario Ministry of Labour investigated six claims of unpaid wages from former employees at Lee's Susur restaurant on King Street West in Toronto that also included complaints of excessive work hours, failure to provide employees with due time off, and various other employment standards and human rights violations.[14]

In April 2017, Fring's Restaurant in Toronto, co-owned by Lee and rapper Drake, had its liquor license suspended for a week by the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario.[15] The establishment was cited for numerous Liquor Control and Fire Protection and Prevention violations, including overcrowding, promoting "immoderate consumption", and failing to post its license.[16]

In August 2017, prior occurrences of employees at Lee's Toronto restaurants — Lee, Fring's, and Bent — having their tips docked to pay for spilled drinks, errors, and unpaid guest checks,[17][18] an illegal business practice in Ontario,[19] were revealed via screenshots on a pseudonymous Twitter account known for calling out personalities in the Toronto food scene.[20] As a result, representatives for the chef have announced the policy is no longer in effect.[20] Still, a petition was launched demanding the chef and his restaurants reinstate the money that was withheld.[20] After more than 7,000 customers petitioned Lee, he and his sons, Kai Bent-Lee and Levi Bent-Lee, who help to manage the family business, announced that they would refund all retained gratuities to current and past staff.[21]


References

  1. Lee, Susur; Lee, Jet. Jet & Susur (TikTok account). Retrieved 14 November 2023.
  2. Hanomansing, Ian (2023-11-20). Jet Bent-Lee turns his Iron Chef dad into a TikTok star (Television production). CBC News. Retrieved 2024-01-04.
  3. Lee, Susur. Iron Chef Dad (YouTube channel). Retrieved 14 November 2023.
  4. "Canadas Top 25 Immigrants 2015". Canadian Immigrant. Retrieved 2021-06-18.
  5. "Iron Chef Canada | Cast Bios". Food Network Canada. Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  6. Kassam, Ashifa (15 September 2007). "Tales of Hell in Lee's kitchen". The Toronto Star. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  7. Grief, Amy (12 April 2017). "Fring's gets its liquor license suspended due to violations". BlogTO.com. Retrieved 12 May 2018.
  8. Chiasson, Ali (21 August 2017). "IOU system at Susur Lee restaurants required staff to use tips to pay for mistakes". CBC.ca. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  9. Manzocco, Natalia (21 August 2017). "Petition asks Susur Lee to pay back employees". Now. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  10. McIntosh, Emma (28 August 2017). "Celebrity chef Susur Lee to return money docked from employees' tips". The Toronto Star. Retrieved 28 December 2017.

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