Hetty Lui McKinnon explained

Hetty Lui McKinnon
Birth Place:Sydney, Australia
Subject:Vegetarian/Plant-based/Vegan cookbooks
Notable Works:Tenderheart: A Cookbook About Vegetables and Unbreakable Family Bonds
Awards:James Beard Foundation Award

Hetty Lui McKinnon is an Australian Chinese Vegetarian/plant-based/vegan cookbook author, recipe developer, and James Beard Award finalist and winner. She has written five cookbooks with the fifth, Tenderheart: A Cookbook About Vegetables and Unbreakable Family Bonds winning the James Beard Award for Vegetable Focused Cooking in 2024.

Early life

McKinnon was born in Sydney to Chinese immigrant parents from Guangdong, China.[1] Her father immigrated in the late 50s and her mom arrived in the early 1960s.[2] She has two siblings and is the youngest sibling.[3]

McKinnon's father worked at the Flemington Markets as an importer and exporter of bananas.[4] He brought fresh produce back for his family, which had a huge influence on McKinnon's later cooking. McKinnon's father died in 1989, when she was 15 years old.[5]

McKinnon's Australian upbringing and cross-cultural experiences profoundly shaped her. She recalls feeling like a minority outside of her home while also growing up in a traditional Chinese household.[6] McKinnon has stated that food was central to her family, calling it a "common language." Although McKinnon grew up eating her mother's Cantonese food, she did not really cook in her childhood.

At school, McKinnon's career advisor dissuaded her from becoming a journalist, which led to her initial stint in public relations.

Career

In the early 2000s, McKinnon moved to London because her husband got a job there. She got a job at a PR agency. McKinnon resided there for four years before moving back to Sydney with her husband.

After her move back to Sydney, McKinnon was freelancing for a PR agency, but found herself gravitating towards cooking. When Mckinnon would put her children down for their naps, she would cook through Yotam Ottolenghi's first cookbook. She credits this as a major turning point that helped her fall in love with cooking, learn practical techniques, and layer flavors.

In 2011, McKinnon founded Arthur Street Kitchen, a community kitchen making salads that highlight local produce, in Sydney's Surry Hills neighborhood. She made salads and sweets out of her home kitchen and delivered them by bike throughout the neighborhood. The menu would rotate, ranging from salads she had been making for years to ones inspired by classic dishes.[7] McKinnon emailed out a weekly menu to subscribers that featured two salads a day, making deliveries on Thursday and Friday for up to forty people.

After about a year, McKinnon decided to write a cookbook. McKinnon was inspired by people asking for her salad recipes, which taught her to develop and write recipes. She met the book's photographer, Luisa Brimble, during an interview with Broadsheet magazine, a Sydney-based magazine. In 2013, McKinnon self-published Community, which was initially just supposed to be for Arthur Street Kitchen's subscribers. However, after a feature in the Australian website The Design Files, McKinnon sold out of cookbooks. A publisher at Pan Macmillan saw her cookbook and published it throughout Australia, where it sold upwards of 80,000 copies. In 2015, Community was shortlisted for the 2015 Australian Book Industry Awards in the category of Illustrated Book of the Year.[8]

In 2015, McKinnon moved to New York City's Carroll Gardens. There, she wrote her second book, Neighborhood, over the course of three months.

In 2017, McKinnon began publishing a multicultural food magazine called The Peddler Journal.

In 2018, McKinnon began a monthly column on ABC Everyday.[9] She is also a regular contributor to New York Times Cooking, The Washington Post, Bon Appetit, and Epicurious.[10] She has been featured on the New York Times Cooking YouTube channel.

Her third cookbook, Family, focuses on "vegetarian comfort food." She was inspired by the crowd-pleasing meals she cooked for her children, which were much more kid-friendly than the salads she made for Arthur Street Kitchen. The book came out in 2019 and was awarded Best Illustrated Book of the Year in the 2019 Australian Book Industry Awards.[11]

Her fourth cookbook, To Asia, with Love, came out in 2020.[12] McKinnon shot all the photos for this book on film. The book features easy Asian recipes and draws heavy influence from her experience as a third culture kid.[13] In interviews, McKinnon discussed how this cookbook was a way for her to reclaim her Chinese Australian heritage and celebrate Asian food culture. In 2022, the book was a James Beard Award finalist.[14]

McKinnon credits her fifth cookbook, Tenderheart, as a major way that she was able to process the emotions around her father's death. Originally, she planned to write the cookbook about her favorite vegetables, but felt gravitated to write about her father. Many of the recipes in the book incorporate foods that he loved, like garlic chile oil, adobo, and tater tots.[15]

Honors and awards

Her first cookbook, Community, is regarded as an Australian cult classic.[16]

McKinnon's 2020 cookbook, To Asia, with Love, was a finalist for the 2022 James Beard Awards. [17] Her 2022 cookbook, Tenderheart: A Cookbook About Vegetables and Unbreakable Family Bonds won the 2024 James Beard Foundation Award for Vegetable Focused Cooking.[18]

Published works

Personal life

McKinnon has been vegetarian since she was 19 years old. In an interview, she stated that she had a general dislike of meat and went fully vegetarian once she started university.

McKinnon has three children.[19]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hetty McKinnon Transcript . 2023-07-06 . Cherry Bombe . en-US.
  2. Web site: Chase . Suzy . 2021-05-11 . Interview with Hetty McKinnon To Asia, With Love . 2023-07-06 . Medium . en.
  3. Web site: 2023-06-17 . Hetty Liu McKinnon navigates grief with an ode to her father and vegetables . 2023-07-06 . KCRW . en.
  4. Web site: Law . Benjamin . 2021-03-19 . Cookbook author Hetty McKinnon: 'Food is foreplay, isn't it?' . 2023-07-06 . The Sydney Morning Herald . en.
  5. Web site: 'Tenderheart' tells one Chinese-Australian chef's stories of family, food, loss and joy . 2023-07-06 . www.wbur.org . en.
  6. Web site: 2020-09-29 . Interview #150 — Hetty McKinnon . 2023-07-06 . LIMINAL . en-AU.
  7. Web site: Clements . Caroline . May 29, 2012 . Arthur Street Kitchen . 2023-07-06 . Broadsheet . en.
  8. Web site: ABIA 2015 shortlists announced Books+Publishing . 2023-07-06 . en-AU.
  9. Web site: 2018-10-04 . Love pad thai? Try this flavour-packed salad . 2023-07-06 . ABC Everyday . en-AU.
  10. Web site: 2023-05-11 . In Conversation with Hetty Mckinnon . 2023-07-06 . Middle Eastern Pantry & Recipes New York Shuk . en-US.
  11. Web site: W . Sally . 2019-05-02 . 2019 Winners Announced . 2023-07-06 . ABIA . en-AU.
  12. Web site: Joseph . Lauren . 2021-05-04 . The Most Cookable Book of Spring: 'To Asia, With Love' . 2023-07-06 . Epicurious . en-US.
  13. Web site: 2021-05-17 . Hetty McKinnon's New Cookbook Champions Easy Asian Cooking . 2023-07-06 . Artful Living Magazine . en-US.
  14. Web site: Read Up on Our 2022 Book Award Nominees James Beard Foundation . 2023-07-06 . www.jamesbeard.org . en.
  15. Web site: Cohen . Danielle . 2023-06-05 . Hetty Lui McKinnon Is a Vegetable Whisperer . 2023-07-06 . The Cut . en-us.
  16. Web site: 2020-09-01 . Hetty McKinnon's Cult Cookbook Finally Comes to America . 2023-07-17 . Cherry Bombe . en-US.
  17. Web site: Awards Search. June 20, 2024. James Beard Foundation Award.
  18. Web site: THE 2024 JAMES BEARD MEDIA AWARD WINNERS. June 20, 2024. James Beard Foundation Award.
  19. Web site: Hetty Lui McKinnon on Málà Project's Secret Sauce and Why You Won't Find Coca-Cola in Her New Cookbook . 2023-07-06 . Simply Recipes . en.