“What’s important about me is my perseverance,” Chanthy Yen confides. The 35-year-old peripatetic chef is now based in Vancouver, where his vegan restaurant Nightshade won a Bib Gourmand two years in a row.
The Cambodian-Canadian is modest, maintaining he’s not passionate about cooking. “I’m passionate about sharing the story, transferring the energy and the thoughtfulness that I put into the food onto the table,” he says.
Yen’s self-effacing persona belies his accomplishments. He’s worked with Ferran Adrià, Andoni Aduriz and Magnus Nilsson. He had his own New Canadian restaurant, Fieldstone, in Montreal, before becoming the Executive Chef at Parliament, a British-style pub in the city’s Old Port. When the pandemic and a series of lockdowns came along, Yen persuaded his bosses to let him open up Touk, a takeout space for Cambodian food, the first in the city. It was, predictably, a hit. He started a GoFundMe to go to Cambodia and cook for the King (that’s on hiatus while the spectre of Covid still looms). He got himself a cookbook deal with Penguin Random House for a collection of his grandmother’s recipes. When pandemic restrictions slowed down, he moved back to Vancouver to reunite with his husband (they just celebrated their 13th anniversary) and run Nightshade. And then he got asked, out of the blue, to be the personal chef to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his family, an opportunity he could not turn down.