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| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1978|9|8}}
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1978|9|8}}
| birth_place = [[Thailand]]
| birth_place = [[Thailand]]
| occupation = Chef
| occupation = Chef, television presenter
| nationality = [[Vietnamese Australians|Vietnamese–Australian]]
| nationality = [[Vietnamese Australians|Vietnamese–Australian]]
| spouse = Suzanna Boyd (separated)<br>Lynne
| spouse = Suzanna Boyd (separated)<br>Lynne
| children = 2
| children = 2
}}
}}
'''Luke Nguyen''' ({{lang-vi|Luke Nguyễn}}; born 8 September 1978) is a [[Vietnamese Australians|Vietnamese–Australian]] chef, restaurateur and television host.
'''Luke Nguyen''' ({{lang-vi|Luke Nguyễn}}; born 8 September 1978) is a [[Vietnamese Australians|Vietnamese–Australian]] chef and restaurateur, best known as the host of the television series, ''[[Luke Nguyen's Vietnam]] and Luke Nguyen's France''.<ref>[http://www.sbs.com.au/shows/lukenguyen/watchonline/page/i/1/show/lukenguyen Luke Nguyen's Vietnam]</ref> The former is a food documentary in which he travels through Vietnam, cooking in the ad hoc manner of the street vendors in the country, usually preparing the dish on the footpaths,<ref>[http://www.sbs.com.au/lukenguyen Luke Nguyen's Vietnam on SBS]</ref> and the latter is an exploration of the [[France|French]] influence on Vietnamese cuisine.<ref>[http://www.sbs.com.au/food/luke-nguyens-france/Luke Nguyen's France]</ref> He is a judge on the television series ''[[MasterChef Vietnam (season 1)|MasterChef Vietnam]]''.


==Early life==
=Career and television appearances=
In 1977, Luke Nguyen’s family escaped Vietnam by boat to Thailand in search of a new life. Upon arriving in Thailand, they were sent to live in a Thai refugee camp. It was in one such camp that Luke was born.<ref name=ethnicb/> A year later, Luke’s family journeyed to Australia and settled in [[Cabramatta]], [[Sydney]].
Following his first two series, the 10-episode ''Luke Nguyen's United Kingdom'',<ref>[http://www.sbs.com.au/food/programs/luke-nguyens-united-kingdom Luke Nguyen's United Kingdom]</ref> first aired on 14 May 2015 with the [[London]] episode in which he toured the city's food markets with his brother, Lewis.


Luke's passion for food stemmed from his food-obsessed parents who owned the Pho Cay Du restaurant in Cabramatta for 15 years. He learned the art and fundamentals of Vietnamese cooking from his parents.<ref name=freshf/>
His next series, the 8 episode ''Luke Nguyen's Street Food Asia'',<ref>[http://www.sbs.com.au/food/programs/luke-nguyens-street-food-asia/episode-guide Luke Nguyen's Street Food Asia]</ref> first aired on 1 September 2016 he explores street food in [[Ho Chi Minh City]], [[Bangkok]], [[Kuala Lumpur]] and [[Jakarta]].


According to an interview he gave to [[Lifestyle Asia]]'s Cindie Chan in 2016, Nguyen said: "Because I’ve always known I wanted to open up a restaurant and I grew up in a restaurant, I know how hard it is in terms of how much work: you don’t have weekends, you work through holidays and Christmas, so as soon as I finished high school I went travelling for one year, just myself and my backpack. I went to 14 different countries on my own".<ref name=lifestyle/>
Nguyen has appeared multiple times on the competitive cooking show ''[[MasterChef Australia]]'' as a guest chef, including season 2 episode 8, and season 8 episode 31.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://tenplay.com.au/channel-ten/masterchef/season-8/episode-31|title = MasterChef - S8 Ep. 31}}</ref>
In 2015, Nguyen appeared on the season 7, episode 3 of the [[SBS (Australian TV channel)|SBS]] genealogy series, [[Who Do You Think You Are? (Australian TV series)|Who Do You Think You Are?]] in which he learned of his previously unknown [[Hakka]] Chinese ancestry through his maternal grandfather, an immigrant from Guangdong. Though his mother had known about this for decades, for unspecified reasons she had hidden this information from Nguyen. The program also revealed information about the involvement of Nguyen's ancestors during the [[Indochina Wars|Indochina]] and [[Vietnam War]]s.<ref>[https://www.sbs.com.au/food/blog/2015/08/11/10-things-you-didnt-know-about-luke-nguyen 10 things you didn’t know about Luke Nguyen]</ref>


=Restaurants=
==Restaurants==
He is the owner of Red Lantern restaurant in [[Surry Hills, New South Wales|Surry Hills]], [[Sydney]] and Vietnam House restaurant in [[Ho Chi Minh City]] and is the author of a number of cookbooks.
Nguyen is the owner of Red Lantern restaurant in [[Surry Hills, New South Wales|Surry Hills]], Sydney and Vietnam House restaurant in [[Ho Chi Minh City]]. He is also the man behind the restaurant Fat Noodle situated in the [[Star Casino]] in Sydney and [[Treasury Casino]] in Brisbane.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-05-10 |title=W88.COM - NHÀ CÁI W88 - TỶ LỆ CÁ CƯỢC TRỰC TUYẾN - W88.COM |url=https://linkw88dn.com/w88-nha-cai-w88-ty-le-ca-cuoc-casino-truc-tuyen-1007/ |access-date=2022-06-18 |website=W88 |language=vi}}</ref>


==Television ==
He is also the man behind the restaurant Fat Noodle situated in the Star Casino [[Sydney]] and Treasury Casino in [[Brisbane]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-05-10 |title=W88.COM - NHÀ CÁI W88 - TỶ LỆ CÁ CƯỢC TRỰC TUYẾN - W88.COM |url=https://linkw88dn.com/w88-nha-cai-w88-ty-le-ca-cuoc-casino-truc-tuyen-1007/ |access-date=2022-06-18 |website=W88 |language=vi}}</ref>
In 2010, [[SBS (Australian TV channel)|SBS]] released Nguyen's first television series, ''[[Luke Nguyen's Vietnam]]''. The series isa food documentary in which he travels through Vietnam, cooking in the ad hoc manner of the street vendors in the country, usually preparing the dish on the footpaths,<ref>[http://www.sbs.com.au/lukenguyen Luke Nguyen's Vietnam on SBS]</ref> He followed up the series with ''Luke Nguyen's France'', which is an exploration of the [[France|French]] influence on Vietnamese cuisine.<ref>[http://www.sbs.com.au/food/luke-nguyens-france/Luke Nguyen's France]</ref>


His next series, the 10-episode ''Luke Nguyen's United Kingdom'', first aired on 14 May 2015 with the [[London]] episode in which he toured the city's food markets with his brother, Lewis.<ref>[http://www.sbs.com.au/food/programs/luke-nguyens-united-kingdom Luke Nguyen's United Kingdom]</ref> His next series, the 8-episode ''Luke Nguyen's Street Food Asia'', in which he explores street food in [[Ho Chi Minh City]], [[Bangkok]], [[Kuala Lumpur]] and [[Jakarta]], first aired on 1 September 2016.<ref>[http://www.sbs.com.au/food/programs/luke-nguyens-street-food-asia/episode-guide Luke Nguyen's Street Food Asia]</ref>
=Books=
Luke is the author of five bestselling and award-winning cookbooks: Secrets Of The Red Lantern, The Songs of Sapa, Indochine, Luke Nguyen’s Greater Mekong and The Food Of Vietnam <https://www.dymocks.com.au/authors/luke-nguyen>.
In an interview he gave to [Lifestyle Asia] he said, "With my cookbooks, it’s not just a recipe book where there is the recipe and a picture — there are stories behind the dishes that I share, so they are also educational and historical" <https://www.lifestyleasia.com/hk/culture/people/qa-celebrity-chef-luke-nguyen-on-travel-and-his-first-hong-kong-restaurant/>.


Nguyen has appeared multiple times on the competitive cooking show ''[[MasterChef Australia]]'' as a guest chef, including during [[MasterChef Australia (series 2)|season 2]], [[MasterChef Australia (series 8)|season 8]], and [[MasterChef Australia (series 15)|season 15]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://tenplay.com.au/channel-ten/masterchef/season-8/episode-31|title = MasterChef - S8 Ep. 31}}</ref> He also served as a judge on ''[[MasterChef Vietnam (season 1)|MasterChef Vietnam]]'' during its first 2 seasons.
=Philanthropy=
In 2009, Luke Nguyen and his then-partner, Suzanna Boyd founded the Little Lantern Foundation in Hoi An, which gives disadvantaged youths an opportunity to undertake a hospitality training program in Little Lantern's operating hotel restaurant and bar.
In 2015, Nguyen appeared on a season 7 episode of the SBS genealogy series [[Who Do You Think You Are? (Australian TV series)|''Who Do You Think You Are?'']], in which he learned of his previously unknown [[Hakka]] Chinese ancestry through his maternal grandfather, an immigrant from [[Guangdong]]. Though his mother had known about this for decades, for unspecified reasons she had hidden this information from Nguyen. The program also revealed information about the involvement of Nguyen's ancestors during the [[Indochina Wars|Indochina]] and [[Vietnam War]]s.<ref>[https://www.sbs.com.au/food/blog/2015/08/11/10-things-you-didnt-know-about-luke-nguyen 10 things you didn’t know about Luke Nguyen]</ref>

In an interview with Girl.com, Ngyuen stated that, "Going back to Vietnam and visiting family members there and seeing where my parents used to live and meeting my[family] and just meeting kids, in general, I realised they've got it hard." He noted how easy Australians have it in comparison. He added, "When I go to Vietnam and see so many people, so many young kids struggling, they don't have enough money to have an education; it's not like Australia where the government gives you the chance to pay back your education costs- in other developing countries, it's not that easy. When I go to Vietnam and meet these kids that cannot afford to go to school and they're out there going through rubbish tins collecting plastic bottles or cans to sell and then give money to their parents it kills me." He reveals that this was the impetus for establishing the Little Lantern Foundation. He wanted to, "set up a little training school with a house and restaurant attached so people can do the theory in the training school and do the physical training in operating a business in the restaurant so they can have that real experience" <https://www.girl.com.au/luke-nguyens-vietnam-interview.htm>.


=Awards=
He was the youngest person inducted into the Sydney Morning Herald's Food Hall of Fame for his role as a presenter and creator of a television series. He has also been awarded Chef of the Year in Vietnam<https://www.ethnicbusinessawards.com/blog/lukenguyenstory>.

In 2021, [Luke Nguyen’s Railway Vietnam], a television series which aired on SBS in 2020, was named Best Lifestyle Program in the Asian Television awards <https://www.mediaweek.com.au/luke-nguyen-creative-media-and-sbs-win-asian-television-award-for-railway-vietnam/>. The series was filmed in 10 locations over 35 days, often in challenging circumstances, and was in post-production for a further six months <https://tvblackbox.com.au/page/2021/01/26/luke-nguyens-railway-vietnam-wins-prestigious-asian-tv-award/>.


In 2020, SBS aired ''Luke Nguyen’s Railway Vietnam'', which was named Best Lifestyle Program at the [[Asian Television Awards]] in 2021.<ref>https://www.mediaweek.com.au/luke-nguyen-creative-media-and-sbs-win-asian-television-award-for-railway-vietnam/</ref> The series was filmed in 10 locations over 35 days, often in challenging circumstances, and was in post-production for a further six months.<ref>https://tvblackbox.com.au/page/2021/01/26/luke-nguyens-railway-vietnam-wins-prestigious-asian-tv-award/</ref>
Luke's restaurant, Red lantern, has won the ‘Best Asian Restaurant’ award by Restaurant and Catering Association many times <https://www.ethnicbusinessawards.com/blog/lukenguyenstory>.


==Books==
=Advertising=
Nguyen is the author of five bestselling and award-winning cookbooks: ''Secrets Of The Red Lantern'', ''The Songs of Sapa'', ''Indochine'', ''Luke Nguyen’s Greater Mekong'', and ''The Food Of Vietnam''.<ref>https://www.dymocks.com.au/authors/luke-nguyen</ref>
Luke Nguyen has been the face for various advertising campaigns. He is the ambassador for 'Pork Australia' promoting Pork in Australian households and restaurants <https://freshfiction.com/author.php?id=20610>.
In an interview he gave to Lifestyle Asia he said, "With my cookbooks, it’s not just a recipe book where there is the recipe and a picture — there are stories behind the dishes that I share, so they are also educational and historical".<ref name=lifestyle>https://www.lifestyleasia.com/hk/culture/people/qa-celebrity-chef-luke-nguyen-on-travel-and-his-first-hong-kong-restaurant</ref>


==Advertising ==
=Personal Life=
Nguyen has been the face for various advertising campaigns. He is the ambassador for Pork Australia, promoting [[pork]] in Australian households and restaurants.<ref name=freshf>https://freshfiction.com/author.php?id=20610</ref>
In 1977, Luke Nguyen’s family escaped Vietnam by boat to Thailand in search of a new life. Upon arriving in Thailand, they were sent to live in Thai refugee camp. It was in one such camp that Luke was born.<https://www.ethnicbusinessawards.com/blog/lukenguyenstory>


==Philanthropy==
A year later, Luke’s family journeyed to Australia and settled in Cabramatta, Sydney.
In 2009, Luke Nguyen and his then-partner, Suzanna Boyd founded the Little Lantern Foundation in [[Hoi An]], which gives disadvantaged youths an opportunity to undertake a hospitality training program in Little Lantern's operating hotel, restaurant and bar.


In an interview with Girl.com, Ngyuen stated that, "Going back to Vietnam and visiting family members there and seeing where my parents used to live and meeting my [family] and just meeting kids, in general, I realised they've got it hard." He noted how easy Australians have it in comparison. He added, "When I go to Vietnam and see so many people, so many young kids struggling, they don't have enough money to have an education; it's not like Australia where the government gives you the chance to pay back your education costs- in other developing countries, it's not that easy. When I go to Vietnam and meet these kids that cannot afford to go to school and they're out there going through rubbish tins collecting plastic bottles or cans to sell and then give money to their parents it kills me." He reveals that this was the impetus for establishing the Little Lantern Foundation. He wanted to, "set up a little training school with a house and restaurant attached so people can do the theory in the training school and do the physical training in operating a business in the restaurant so they can have that real experience".<ref>https://www.girl.com.au/luke-nguyens-vietnam-interview.htm</ref>
Luke's passion for food stemmed from his food obsessed parents who owned 'Pho Cay Du' restaurant in Cabramatta for 15 years. He learned the art and fundamentals of Vietnamese cooking from his parents <https://freshfiction.com/author.php?id=20610>.


==Awards==
According to an interview he gave to Lifestyle Asia's Cindie Chan in 2016, Nguyen said: "Because I’ve always known I wanted to open up a restaurant and I grew up in a restaurant, I know how hard it is in terms of how much work: you don’t have weekends, you work through holidays and Christmas, so as soon as I finished high school I went travelling for one year, just myself and my backpack. I went to 14 different countries on my own" <https://www.lifestyleasia.com/hk/culture/people/qa-celebrity-chef-luke-nguyen-on-travel-and-his-first-hong-kong-restaurant/>.
Ngyuen was the youngest person inducted into the [[Sydney Morning Herald]]'s Food Hall of Fame. He has also been awarded Chef of the Year in Vietnam, and his restaurant Red lantern has won the Best Asian Restaurant award by Restaurant and Catering Association many times.<ref name=ethnicb>https://www.ethnicbusinessawards.com/blog/lukenguyenstory</ref>


== References ==
== References ==
Line 60: Line 53:


== External links ==
== External links ==
*[http://www.redlantern.com.au/ Luke Nguyen's restaurant]
*[http://www.redlantern.com.au/ Luke Nguyen's restaurant Red Lantern]
*[http://www.sbs.com.au/food/programs/luke-nguyens-vietnam-s1/episode-guide/ Episode guide Luke Nguyen's Vietnam Series 1]
*[http://www.sbs.com.au/shows/LukeNguyen/episodes/page/season/2/ Episode guide Luke Nguyen's Vietnam Series 2]
*[http://www.sbs.com.au/food/article/2014/08/14/luke-nguyens-france-episode-guide/ Episode guide Luke Nguyen's France]
*[http://www.sbs.com.au/food/programs/luke-nguyens-united-kingdom/episode-guide/ Episode guide Luke Nguyen's United Kingdom]
*[http://www.sbs.com.au/food/programs/luke-nguyens-street-food-asia/episode-guide/ Episode guide Luke Nguyen's Street Food Asia]
*https://www.lifestyleasia.com/hk/culture/people/qa-celebrity-chef-luke-nguyen-on-travel-and-his-first-hong-kong-restaurant/
*https://www.girl.com.au/luke-nguyens-vietnam-interview.htm


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}

Revision as of 02:48, 14 June 2023

Luke Nguyen
Nguyen (right) with Jeff Rowley
Born (1978-09-08) September 8, 1978 (age 46)
NationalityVietnamese–Australian
Occupation(s)Chef, television presenter
Spouse(s)Suzanna Boyd (separated)
Lynne
Children2

Luke Nguyen (Template:Lang-vi; born 8 September 1978) is a Vietnamese–Australian chef, restaurateur and television host.

Early life

In 1977, Luke Nguyen’s family escaped Vietnam by boat to Thailand in search of a new life. Upon arriving in Thailand, they were sent to live in a Thai refugee camp. It was in one such camp that Luke was born.[1] A year later, Luke’s family journeyed to Australia and settled in Cabramatta, Sydney.

Luke's passion for food stemmed from his food-obsessed parents who owned the Pho Cay Du restaurant in Cabramatta for 15 years. He learned the art and fundamentals of Vietnamese cooking from his parents.[2]

According to an interview he gave to Lifestyle Asia's Cindie Chan in 2016, Nguyen said: "Because I’ve always known I wanted to open up a restaurant and I grew up in a restaurant, I know how hard it is in terms of how much work: you don’t have weekends, you work through holidays and Christmas, so as soon as I finished high school I went travelling for one year, just myself and my backpack. I went to 14 different countries on my own".[3]

Restaurants

Nguyen is the owner of Red Lantern restaurant in Surry Hills, Sydney and Vietnam House restaurant in Ho Chi Minh City. He is also the man behind the restaurant Fat Noodle situated in the Star Casino in Sydney and Treasury Casino in Brisbane.[4]

Television

In 2010, SBS released Nguyen's first television series, Luke Nguyen's Vietnam. The series isa food documentary in which he travels through Vietnam, cooking in the ad hoc manner of the street vendors in the country, usually preparing the dish on the footpaths,[5] He followed up the series with Luke Nguyen's France, which is an exploration of the French influence on Vietnamese cuisine.[6]

His next series, the 10-episode Luke Nguyen's United Kingdom, first aired on 14 May 2015 with the London episode in which he toured the city's food markets with his brother, Lewis.[7] His next series, the 8-episode Luke Nguyen's Street Food Asia, in which he explores street food in Ho Chi Minh City, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta, first aired on 1 September 2016.[8]

Nguyen has appeared multiple times on the competitive cooking show MasterChef Australia as a guest chef, including during season 2, season 8, and season 15.[9] He also served as a judge on MasterChef Vietnam during its first 2 seasons.

In 2015, Nguyen appeared on a season 7 episode of the SBS genealogy series Who Do You Think You Are?, in which he learned of his previously unknown Hakka Chinese ancestry through his maternal grandfather, an immigrant from Guangdong. Though his mother had known about this for decades, for unspecified reasons she had hidden this information from Nguyen. The program also revealed information about the involvement of Nguyen's ancestors during the Indochina and Vietnam Wars.[10]

In 2020, SBS aired Luke Nguyen’s Railway Vietnam, which was named Best Lifestyle Program at the Asian Television Awards in 2021.[11] The series was filmed in 10 locations over 35 days, often in challenging circumstances, and was in post-production for a further six months.[12]

Books

Nguyen is the author of five bestselling and award-winning cookbooks: Secrets Of The Red Lantern, The Songs of Sapa, Indochine, Luke Nguyen’s Greater Mekong, and The Food Of Vietnam.[13] In an interview he gave to Lifestyle Asia he said, "With my cookbooks, it’s not just a recipe book where there is the recipe and a picture — there are stories behind the dishes that I share, so they are also educational and historical".[3]

Advertising

Nguyen has been the face for various advertising campaigns. He is the ambassador for Pork Australia, promoting pork in Australian households and restaurants.[2]

Philanthropy

In 2009, Luke Nguyen and his then-partner, Suzanna Boyd founded the Little Lantern Foundation in Hoi An, which gives disadvantaged youths an opportunity to undertake a hospitality training program in Little Lantern's operating hotel, restaurant and bar.

In an interview with Girl.com, Ngyuen stated that, "Going back to Vietnam and visiting family members there and seeing where my parents used to live and meeting my [family] and just meeting kids, in general, I realised they've got it hard." He noted how easy Australians have it in comparison. He added, "When I go to Vietnam and see so many people, so many young kids struggling, they don't have enough money to have an education; it's not like Australia where the government gives you the chance to pay back your education costs- in other developing countries, it's not that easy. When I go to Vietnam and meet these kids that cannot afford to go to school and they're out there going through rubbish tins collecting plastic bottles or cans to sell and then give money to their parents it kills me." He reveals that this was the impetus for establishing the Little Lantern Foundation. He wanted to, "set up a little training school with a house and restaurant attached so people can do the theory in the training school and do the physical training in operating a business in the restaurant so they can have that real experience".[14]

Awards

Ngyuen was the youngest person inducted into the Sydney Morning Herald's Food Hall of Fame. He has also been awarded Chef of the Year in Vietnam, and his restaurant Red lantern has won the Best Asian Restaurant award by Restaurant and Catering Association many times.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b https://www.ethnicbusinessawards.com/blog/lukenguyenstory
  2. ^ a b https://freshfiction.com/author.php?id=20610
  3. ^ a b https://www.lifestyleasia.com/hk/culture/people/qa-celebrity-chef-luke-nguyen-on-travel-and-his-first-hong-kong-restaurant
  4. ^ "W88.COM - NHÀ CÁI W88 - TỶ LỆ CÁ CƯỢC TRỰC TUYẾN - W88.COM". W88 (in Vietnamese). 2020-05-10. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
  5. ^ Luke Nguyen's Vietnam on SBS
  6. ^ Nguyen's France
  7. ^ Luke Nguyen's United Kingdom
  8. ^ Luke Nguyen's Street Food Asia
  9. ^ "MasterChef - S8 Ep. 31".
  10. ^ 10 things you didn’t know about Luke Nguyen
  11. ^ https://www.mediaweek.com.au/luke-nguyen-creative-media-and-sbs-win-asian-television-award-for-railway-vietnam/
  12. ^ https://tvblackbox.com.au/page/2021/01/26/luke-nguyens-railway-vietnam-wins-prestigious-asian-tv-award/
  13. ^ https://www.dymocks.com.au/authors/luke-nguyen
  14. ^ https://www.girl.com.au/luke-nguyens-vietnam-interview.htm