How to Turn Passion & Play Into Impact & Success | Chef Irene Shiang Li

如何将激情和玩耍转化为影响和成功|主厨李香玲

Good Life Project

自我完善

2022-05-23

53 分钟
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When Chef Irene Li opened a food truck, mei mei, with her siblings, hoping to have fun together, build something cool, and reimagine Chinese comfort cuisine with a playful, modern twist, what happened next took everyone by surprise. Mei Mei exploded, becoming the talk of the town within months. They soon found themselves looking for space and opening a full-service restaurant that was perpetually abuzz. The restaurant was a big success. But, beyond the chance to do something cool with her brother and sister, and push the culinary envelope, there was something else going on. Growing up, Irene’s grandparents immigrated to the US and slowly built up their own restaurants. While her brother had been in fine dining for years, she’d developed a deep passion not just for food, but also for the environment, viewing agriculture, the food and restaurant industry as a potential vehicle to change people’s lives, to completely upend the way restaurants run, and weave in a powerful thru line of social justice, advocacy and impact. And, of course, fun and love.  As mei mei took off, Irene and the restaurant landed features everywhere from Food & Wine and The New York Times to People, Bon Appetit and more. Irene gained acclaim for her creativity and innovation, being named a Zagat 30 Under 30 and Forbes 30 Under 30 winner, six-time James Beard Foundation Rising Star Chef nominee, and James Beard Foundation Leadership Award winner. Her cookbook is Double Awesome Chinese Food: Irresistible and Totally Achievable Recipes from Our Chinese-American Kitchen. Like many restaurants, though, the pandemic was a brutal experience, the restaurant space eventually closed its doors, but mei mei - the creative, joyful food innovator brand - transformed itself into a next-generation direct-to-consumer and wholesale food manufacturer, focusing on their signature dumplings, with a heartbeat that remains deeply rooted in industry reform and social justice. Irene’s commitment to food, agriculture, cooking and community is a testament to the dedication she has for her work and her genuine commitment to being in relationship with others to impact the greater good.  You can find Irene at: Website | Instagram | Dumplings | Prepshift If you LOVED this episode: you’ll also love the conversations we had with Ellen Bennett, the founder of Hedley & Bennett chef’s apron brand, about how she built a business in the food industry when everyone around her told her it’d never work. Check out our offerings & partners:  My New Book SparkedMy New Podcast SPARKED.Visit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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  • Could we be the best restaurant to work at?

  • Could we be the best restaurant as a community partner?

  • Could we be the restaurant that helped feed the most people who were experiencing food insecurity?

  • And so that's really what drives me now, is what else can a restaurant do?

  • How else can a restaurant find its success?

  • So when chef Irene Lee opened a food truck, Meimei with her siblings, hoping to have fun together, build something cool, and maybe, maybe reimagine chinese comfort cuisine with this playful, modern twist.

  • Well, what happened next kind of took everyone by surprise.

  • Meimei exploded, becoming the talk of the town within months.

  • They soon found themselves looking for a physical space and opening a full service restaurant that was perpetually buzzing.

  • And the restaurant was just this big success.

  • But beyond the chance to do something cool with her brother and sister and push the culinary envelope, there was something else going on.

  • She had developed a deep passion, not just for food, but also for the environment and for viewing agriculture and the food and restaurant industry as potential vehicles to change people's lives, to completely upend the way restaurants run and weave in a powerful through line of social justice, advocacy and impact.

  • And, of course, having a lot of fun and love.

  • And as May May took off, so Irene and the restaurant landed features everywhere from food and wine and the New York Times to people, bon appetit and more.

  • Irene herself gained acclaim for her creativity and innovation, being named a Zagat 30 under 30 and Forbes 30 under 30 winner six times, James Beard Foundation Rising star chef nominee and James Beard Foundation Leadership award winner.

  • Like many restaurants, though, the pandemic was just a brutal experience.

  • The restaurant space itself eventually closed its stores.

  • But Meimei, the creative, joyful food innovator brand, transformed itself into a next generation, direct to consumer and wholesale food manufacturer, focusing on their signature dumplings.

  • And with a heartbeat that remains deeply rooted in industry reform and social justice.

  • Her commitment to food and agriculture and cooking and community.