© Provided by INSIDER Celebrity chef and restaurateur David Chang in 2007. Patrick McMullan/Contributor/Getty Images
- In an essay for Eater, ex-Momofuku employee Hannah Selinger says 'Eat a Peach,' a new memoir by David Chang, 'fails to account for trauma he caused me.'
- Selinger, who was the corporate beverage director for Chang's Momofuku restaurant group in 2008, recalled several instances where she witnessed Chang's rages firsthand, including one incident where she says he berated her in front of her team.
- Chang would easily and infamously enter into fits of rage over unpredictable things during his time working in his restaurants, Selinger said.
- Though Selinger acknowledges that Chang's memoir touches on these points in his life, and he writes about how they affected him at the time, Selinger wrote that Chang didn't mention the people he lashed out at, nor did he offer an apology to her for his behavior.
- When reached by Eater's editors for comment on Selinger's essay, Chang said that while he didn't recall the specific incidents Selinger mentioned, 'they are entirely consistent with my behavior at the time, which I did not begin to correct until several years later' and 'the bottom line is that I'm sorry.'
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At the helm of the Momofuku empire is chef and businessman David Chang. The now TV personality is known for his old tendencies to fly off the handle in a fit of rage when something wasn't done right in one of his kitchens.
- David Chang is the chef and founder of Momofuku. Since opening Momofuku Noodle Bar in New York City in 2004, he has been honored with six James Beard Awards, including Outstanding Chef, and has.
- Ex-Momofuku employee says David Chang memoir lacks apology for trauma December 23, 2020 3 minute read In an essay for Eater, ex-Momofuku employee Hannah Selinger says “Eat a Peach,” a new memoir by David Chang, “fails to account for trauma he caused me.”.
While Chang himself addresses his old habits and discusses his bipolar disorder diagnosis and manic episodes in his memoir, 'Eat a Peach,' one former Momofuku employee says that he failed to mention, acknowledge, or apologize for how his behavior affected his staff.
'The anger was always framed as a means to an end, part of Chang's quest to create 'the perfect restaurant,' Hannah Selinger, the corporate beverage director for Momofuku in 2008, wrote in an essay published on Eater on Monday.
Selinger wrote that she had worked in several restaurants before, but 'in all my years of restaurant work, I had never seen anything like the roiling, red-faced, screaming, pulsing, wrath-filled man that was David Chang.'
She noted that in his book, Chang addresses his bouts of extreme anger as something he blacks out in his mind and forgets.
'The recipients of Dave's anger - his employees - lack the same power to forget, or to leave the consideration of its impact to others,' Selinger wrote in her essay.
Selinger goes on to recount several instances where she says she witnessed the wrath of Chang firsthand, including a time he purportedly yelled at her in front of her team.
David Chang’s Memoir, ‘Eat a Peach,’ Provides Food for Thought David Chang’s “Eat a Peach” is no more a standard foodie memoir than his ramen is a humdrum bowl of soup.
David Chang Restaurants
'From then on, it was virtually impossible to command respect from my staff,' she wrote. 'They had seen me as Dave saw me, as someone unworthy of respect.'
Selinger wrote that Chang never offered up an apology to any of his former employees for the consequences she said his actions had on their lives and careers.
'But for all of the hand-wringing, all of the guilt, all of the acknowledgment of the bad things that he's done or condoned, nowhere in the book does he say 'I'm sorry' or apologize - the word 'sorry' appears six times, never in the form of an apology - other than to 'anyone whose role I've exaggerated or downplayed in my memory,' she wrote.
'David Chang let the important business of taking care of his staff get away from him; he let us down. He let me down,' Selinger continued.
When reached by the editors at Eater for comment on Selinger's essay, Chang said: 'While I do not recall these specific instances, they are entirely consistent with my behavior at the time, which I did not begin to correct until several years later. The bottom line is that I'm sorry. I'm still working to get better and repair many personal and professional relationships, but I also respect that the path to forgiveness does not exist on my terms. No one but me deserves to carry the burden of my past failings.'
Selinger and representatives for Chang declined to comment further at this time.
Eat A Peach Review
Read Selinger's full essay at Eater »
David Chang Autobiography
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