Bobby Chinn is an American international chef, television presenter, restaurateur and cookbook author.[1][2] He is a culinary celebrity across Asia and the Middle East, thanks to his role as host of Discovery TLC's World Cafe,[3] and as a judge on MBC's Top Chef Middle East.[4] He opened two award-winning restaurants in Vietnam – Restaurant Bobby Chinn in Hanoi (2001) and Bobby Chinn Saigon in Ho Chi Minh (2011), then relocated to London in 2014 and opened the House of Ho Vietnamese restaurant.[5]
Chinn was educated at St. George's College in Cairo[8] and Millfield in England[9] before graduating from the Urban School of San Francisco.[10] Chinn then graduated from Richmond College in London in 1986, where he earned a BA in finance and economics.[11] In 2020 he was awarded an honorary Doctorate in Liberal Arts from Richmond College.[12]
Chinn's culinary career began at the Elka Restaurant in the Miyako Hotel in San Francisco,[14] working under notable chefs Elka Gilmore and Traci Des Jardins. His big break came from Hubert Keller of Fleur de Lys, where he worked the pantry for a year.[15] He was part of the opening team at the Coconut Grove on Van Ness Avenue, where he became the saucier, but succumbed to a back injury. He work-staged in France, then returned to San Francisco for back surgery.
In 1995, Chinn moved to Ho Chi Minh City[16] and worked at La Camargue restaurant. Within six months, he had opened his own restaurant, Saigon Joe's, and moved to Hanoi to open another restaurant, Miro. In 1997, he opened the Red Onion, overlooking the infamous "Hanoi Hilton".[17] The success of the restaurant gave him the opportunity to open his eponymous restaurant in 2001, Restaurant Bobby Chinn.[18]
In 2014, Chinn moved to London and launched a modern Vietnamese concept at the House of Ho, which occupies the former site of the 2i's Coffee Bar, Soho.[19]
Television
Chinn's television career was launched with his first solo TV show, World Café Asia, on TLC.[20][3] For the second season, World Café Middle East, Chinn won "Best Entertainment Presenter" at the Asia Television Awards in 2007.[21]
Chin's cookbook, Wild Wild East: Recipes & Stories from Vietnam was released in 2007. It is both a guide to Vietnamese food and a diary of Chinn's adventures in Vietnam. In the foreword, Anthony Bourdain claims that "what Bobby doesn’t know about Southeast Asian food is not worth knowing".[23]
Ambassador roles
In 2012, he was appointed WWF Ambassador for Sustainable Seafood.[24] As WWF's Sustainable Seafood Ambassador for the Coral Triangle, he helped WWF raise awareness on the importance of responsible seafood consumption, particularly in the Coral Triangle region, to help alleviate pressures on coastal and marine environments and dwindling fish populations.
In 2014, he was appointed Tourism Ambassador for Vietnam in Europe.[25]
In 2021, he was appointed Goodwill Ambassador for the Naomi Tami Memorial Fund.[26]
References
^Sesser, Stan (October 27, 2000). "Hanoi's Red Onion Bistro Has the Heart of San Francisco". The Wall Street Journal. Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Retrieved March 8, 2021. ...Mr. Chinn is...[a]n American citizen...born in New Zealand...
^Kaufman, Deborah, ed. (2003). Fodor's Vietnam (3 ed.). New York: Random House. p. 41. ISBN1-4000-1101-9. Hanoi's most gregarious chef, American Bobby Chinn...