Chef Samuel Lee Sum on being a Hongkonger in Paris, passing a test ‘worse than Top Chef or MasterChef’, and where to eat in the French capital
- Samuel Lee Sum, executive chef at Shang Palace in the Shangri-La hotel in Paris, is the only Hongkonger in charge of a Michelin-star restaurant in the city
- He talks about growing up in Hong Kong, what it was like to move to Paris without knowing any French and how, in his kitchen, he treats his cooks ‘like uncles’
The Shang Palace restaurant is what the French like to refer to as a temple to gastronomy. Dedicated to exquisite Cantonese cuisine, it is located in the Shangri-La’s Parisian hotel, an opulent palace opposite the Eiffel Tower that was once owned by the descendants of Napoléon Bonaparte.
At the end of a meal in Paris, it is traditional for the head chef to come out and pass from table to table, chatting to diners – an intimidating experience for the shy cuisinier who is happier staying hidden away in his kitchen. But Lee oozes confidence as he takes the plaudits, making easy conversation with the cosmopolitan movers and shakers in the room.
He has come a long way from Yuen Long, in Hong Kong’s New Territories.
“Throughout my life I have always wanted to set ambitions. I did not decide to become a chef until I left school at 18, but when that decision was made, I fixed a personal goal that I would become an executive Chinese chef by the age of 30. And if I did not achieve this by that age then I would abandon the world of cooking and find a different job. Fortunately, I made executive Chinese chef at the age of 26 and have not looked back since.”