The chef from San Francisco’s Mister Jiu’s shares the secrets to turning leftovers into chef-level showstoppers.
Brandon Jew, who won the 2022 James Beard Award for Best Chef: California, is chef-owner of Michelin-starred Mister Jiu’s in the heart of San Francisco’s Chinatown. The restaurant opened in 2016, on a site that has housed Chinese restaurants since the 1880s.
US-born Jew sees himself as continuing in the tradition of those restaurants, cooking a contemporary version of Chinese-American food. Like the diaspora chefs before him who used whatever ingredients they had access to while trying to stay authentically Chinese, he sources local ingredients hyper-seasonally. He also works closely with nearby farmers to grow organic heritage Chinese ingredients.
“I was looking for something more compelling than just building my own ego as a chef. I wanted to pay homage to something deeper,” he says. “When I realized I was continuing the legacy of restaurants that’ve been doing this in San Francisco for generations, it made me feel at peace.”
But while he may fit into a tradition, it is one he is evolving. He uses non-Chinese ingredients in his dishes, and takes inspiration from varied culinary cultures to create fresh new takes on Chinese cuisine. He is particularly known for his surprising takes on fried rice, including one rendition inspired by dirty rice, a Louisiana Creole dish often containing chopped chicken liver.
Inspired by his mother, who “always packed doggy bags of the scraps of roast beef and ribeye from Saturday nights at Sizzler” to make lunch of fried rice the next day, he also knows the secret to turning leftovers into chef-level showstoppers.
Below, Jew shares tips and two recipes—for strips of steak and for fish off-cuts—that can transform scraps into mouthwatering fried rice meals.