Английская Википедия:Bo Songvisava

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Duangporn "Bo" Songvisava (born Шаблон:Birth based on age as of date[1]) is a Thai chef and restaurateur. She and her husband, chef Dylan Jones, own and operated Bo.lan, a restaurant in Bangkok's Thong Lo neighborhood. In 2018 Songvisava was profiled on the fifth season of the documentary series Chef's Table.

Early life and education

Duangporn Songvisava, nicknamed "Bo",[2] was born in Bangkok, Thailand,[3] to a Thai mother and a Taiwanese father.[4][5] She has four siblings.[6] Her parents owned and operated a canning business.[7] Growing up, she helped them cook Thai-Chinese food at home;[4] they were her inspiration to become a chef.[7] Her family also ate Western food, but Thai was her favorite.[8]

Songvisava wanted to go to culinary school,[8] but her parents urged her to go to college and earn a traditional degree. She studied English and French for two years until it became unbearable.[4] Thailand at the time had no culinary degree offerings, so she transferred to Griffith University's Hotel Management School[4] and took a business degree in Restaurant and Catering Management.[6] Unable to find a hotel job after graduating, she returned to Australia to study at the University of Adelaide and Le Cordon Bleu and graduated with a master's in Gastronomy.[2][4]

Career

Songvisava's first professional position was at Amanda Gale's Cy'an, a Mediterranean restaurant in Bangkok, as a commis 3.[6] While there, she was asked about Thai food by a visiting foreign chef and realized she knew very little about Thai food.[6] When she asked other local chefs, she discovered very few knew much about traditional Thai food.[6] Thailand at the time had few restaurants that cooked traditional Thai, as most catered to the palate of tourists.[6][9] In 2005[10] she took a position as a chef de partie[10] in London with David Thompson's Nahm, then seen as one of the world's best Thai restaurants and one of the few with a Michelin star.[6][11] She met her husband, then working as a sous chef there,[10] and in 2008[12] the couple moved to Thailand.[6]

In 2008, Songvisava and Jones opened Bo.lan in what was previously a bungalow-style home in Bangkok's Thong Lo neighborhood.[4][10][13] It followed a slow food concept[14][15] and served traditional Thai food.[2] The New York Times called it "perhaps Bangkok's first chic Thai restaurant."[16] The Daily Telegraph called the food "sophisticated but unpretentious."[17] Songvisava received most of her inspiration from reading old cookbooks and from talking with farmers.[18][9] The restaurant name was a portmanteau of her and her husband's first names, chosen because it sounds like the Thai word for "classic".[2] The restaurant used solar panels[19] and had its own vegetable garden and water filtration system and recycles waste.[3] It sourced from local farmers and artisans,[4] and the wine list includes emerging Thai wineries.[20] It resisted demanding organic certification because the bureaucratic paperwork might drive away farms, so Songvisava says, "I visit the farms and if I trust that they're doing organic, I buy from them."[19] After operating for 13 years, the restaurant closed in 2021 amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. Songvisava cited pressures from coronavirus measures such as semi-lockdowns, reduced seating capacity, and the ban on alcohol sales.[21] In March 2022, Bo.lan reopened for so-called "ad hoc dining", held multiple times each month.[22] The restaurant fully reopened in December 2023.[23]

Songvisava taught food & beverage management and Thai cooking at two Thai universities and hosted a PBS show called Kin Yu Kue (Eat Live Be) covering food issues.[4][19]

In 2014 the couple hosted a pop-up in New York's Greenwich Village.[24]

In 2015, the couple opened Err, which translates to "yeah" in Thai, a casual dining restaurant serving street food.[19][13] Dishes are shared family style.[15] The New York Times called it "rustic drinking food with a focus on quality ingredients."[11]

In 2016 they hosted a pop-up in Hong Kong.[25]

In 2018 Songvisava was profiled on the fifth season of the documentary series Chef's Table.[6] That same year she was profiled on Swedish documentary series Four Hands Menu.[26]

In 2019 Jones and Songvisava judged the finals of Hyatt's Good Taste Series.[27]

Awards and recognition

Bo.lan has a Michelin star, awarded the first year Michelin put out a guide to Thailand.[28][29] CNN credited Jones and Songvisava, along with their mentor David Thompson, with "forcibly (and sometimes tactlessly) reacquainting Thai diners with their own culinary heritage."[28]

In 2013 Songvisava was named Asia's best female chef by 50 Best Restaurants in Asia, the inauguration of the award,[4][30] and Bo.lan was number 36 on the 50 Best Restaurants in Asia list.[12]

In 2017 it was named to the Culinary Institute of America's Plant-forward Global 50 list[31] and was 19th on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants.[8]

In 2018 Bo.lan was named number 37 on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants.[8]

In 2019 Bo.lan was named one of the 18 best restaurants in the world by World Restaurant Awards[32] and was 19th on S. Pellegrino & Acqua Panna Asia's 50 Best Restaurants.[13][3]

Personal life

Songvisava is married to Australian-born Dylan Jones.[3] The two met while working at London's Nahm and married in 2012.[3][10] The couple have two sons.[10][13]

See also

References

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