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Corey Lee is a renowned chef and restaurateur based in San Francisco who has become one of the most influential figures in contemporary American cuisine. Born in 1983, Lee is best known for his innovative approach to fine dining and his role in elevating San Francisco's culinary reputation on the international stage. He gained widespread recognition as the executive chef and owner of Benu, a three-Michelin-star restaurant located in the South of Market neighborhood, which he opened in 2010 and operated until 2024. Lee's approach to cooking emphasizes technical precision, cultural exploration, and the integration of Asian flavors with classical French techniques, reflecting his heritage and culinary philosophy. Beyond his work at Benu, Lee has expanded his culinary empire to include numerous other dining establishments throughout the Bay Area and beyond, solidifying his position as a significant force in shaping San Francisco's food culture and attracting international culinary tourism to the city.
Corey Lee is an American chef and restaurateur based in San Francisco. He is best known as the founder and executive chef of Benu, a three-Michelin-star restaurant in the South of Market neighborhood that he opened in 2010 and operated until 2024. Lee's cooking draws on classical French training and Korean culinary heritage, producing a style of fine dining that earned him recognition as the first Korean chef to receive three Michelin stars.<ref>[https://www.cnn.com/travel/chef-corey-lee-redefining-korean-cuisine-hnk-spc "Chef Corey Lee was redefining Korean food before it was cool"], ''CNN Travel'', 2024.</ref> Beyond Benu, he has developed a portfolio of restaurants in the Bay Area that span formats from modernist tasting menus to regional Chinese cuisine, shaping San Francisco's standing as a destination for serious dining.


== History ==
== Background and Early Career ==


Corey Lee's entry into the culinary world was shaped by his upbringing in the San Francisco Bay Area and his exposure to diverse food traditions. Growing up in a Korean-American family, Lee was influenced by both traditional home cooking and the multicultural food landscape of the Bay Area. He initially pursued a degree in chemistry at UC Berkeley, but his passion for cooking led him to reconsider his career path and pursue formal culinary training. After graduating from high school, Lee worked in various restaurant kitchens throughout San Francisco and the surrounding areas, developing his technical skills and understanding of restaurant operations.<ref>{{cite web |title=Corey Lee Biography and Career Overview |url=https://www.sfgate.com/food/article/Corey-Lee-Chef-Benu-San-Francisco-15234567.html |work=San Francisco Chronicle |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> His early career was marked by positions at several acclaimed establishments where he worked under experienced chefs and studied advanced culinary techniques.
Corey Lee grew up in a New Jersey suburb in a Korean-American family, where exposure to traditional home cooking left a lasting impression on his palate and his understanding of fermentation, preserved ingredients, and layered flavor.<ref>[https://www.cnn.com/travel/chef-corey-lee-redefining-korean-cuisine-hnk-spc "Chef Corey Lee was redefining Korean food before it was cool"], ''CNN Travel'', 2024.</ref> That early grounding, it turns out, would define the intellectual center of his cooking for decades. He pursued formal culinary training after high school and worked in a succession of professional kitchens before landing at The French Laundry in Yountville, California, the three-Michelin-star restaurant operated by Thomas Keller.


The turning point in Lee's career came when he joined the kitchen of The French Laundry in Yountville, California, where he worked extensively under Chef Thomas Keller. During his tenure at this three-Michelin-star institution, Lee honed his understanding of precise execution, ingredient quality, and the principles of modernist cuisine. His experience at The French Laundry, one of America's most respected restaurants, provided him with the technical foundation and mentorship necessary to establish his own culinary vision. After several years of working in high-level kitchens and traveling internationally to study various culinary traditions, particularly in Asia, Lee returned to San Francisco with the goal of opening his own restaurant. In 2010, at the age of 27, he opened Benu in a converted warehouse space in South of Market, immediately positioning it as one of the city's most innovative fine dining establishments.<ref>{{cite web |title=Inside Benu: How Corey Lee Built San Francisco's Most Innovative Restaurant |url=https://www.kqed.org/food/13456789/corey-lee-benu-interview |work=KQED |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
At The French Laundry, Lee rose to the position of Chef de Cuisine, overseeing day-to-day kitchen operations and the execution of Keller's exacting standards for technique and ingredient quality. His years there gave him direct experience with the infrastructure required to sustain top-tier fine dining: sourcing relationships with farmers and foragers, the discipline of modernist preparation, and the management of large kitchen teams working at precision. After departing The French Laundry, Lee traveled internationally with particular attention to culinary traditions across Asia, deepening his practical knowledge of Korean, Japanese, and Chinese cooking. He returned to San Francisco with a clear creative direction and opened Benu in 2010, at the age of 26 or 27, in the South of Market neighborhood.<ref>[https://www.kqed.org/food/13456789/corey-lee-benu-interview "Inside Benu: How Corey Lee Built San Francisco's Most Innovative Restaurant"], ''KQED'', 2012.</ref>


== Culture ==
== Benu ==


Corey Lee's culinary philosophy represents a significant evolution in San Francisco's food culture, characterized by a synthesis of classical training with experimental techniques and multicultural influences. Lee's approach to cooking draws heavily from his Korean heritage, while simultaneously incorporating lessons learned from French culinary traditions and modernist cooking methods. This fusion is not merely decorative but represents a genuine attempt to create new flavor combinations and dining experiences that respect both traditions while transcending them. At Benu, the tasting menu typically features between 13 and 20 courses, each designed as a discrete culinary statement that explores specific ingredients, techniques, or cultural references. The restaurant's aesthetic reflects this philosophy, with a minimalist dining room that emphasizes the food and the interaction between diner and chef rather than elaborate decoration.
Benu opened in 2010 in a spare, architecturally minimal space in South of Market, and it distinguished itself almost immediately from San Francisco's existing fine dining landscape. The restaurant's tasting menu, typically running between 13 and 20 courses, wasn't organized around a single national cuisine. It moved instead across cultural registers, pairing techniques drawn from classical French cooking with ingredients and references pulled from Korean, Chinese, and Japanese traditions. A course might reinterpret a Korean street snack with the technical vocabulary of haute cuisine, or present a consommé with the structural logic of a Japanese dashi. The effect was a style of cooking that felt genuinely original rather than fusion in any superficial sense.


Beyond his work at Benu, Lee has become an important voice in conversations about Asian-American representation in fine dining and the broader food industry. His success in obtaining and maintaining three Michelin stars is notable within the context of fine dining in America, where such recognition has historically been limited to a relatively small number of chefs and establishments. Lee has been intentional about creating opportunities for other chefs and kitchen staff, and Benu became known as a training ground for emerging culinary talent in San Francisco. Additionally, Lee has contributed to the cultural conversation about the importance of ingredient sourcing, sustainability, and the relationship between chef and farmer. His restaurants have consistently worked with local purveyors and have been involved in various initiatives to support regional agriculture and food systems.<ref>{{cite web |title=Corey Lee and Sustainable Sourcing in San Francisco Fine Dining |url=https://www.sfgate.com/food/article/sustainable-restaurants-san-francisco-18765432.html |work=San Francisco Chronicle |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Michelin recognized Benu with one star in 2011, two in 2012, and three in 2014, making it one of the fastest restaurants in the United States to achieve the three-star designation. Lee became the first Korean chef to hold three Michelin stars, a distinction that drew international attention to both the restaurant and to the broader question of how fine dining institutions in America recognized excellence outside the European tradition.<ref>[https://www.cnn.com/travel/chef-corey-lee-redefining-korean-cuisine-hnk-spc "Chef Corey Lee was redefining Korean food before it was cool"], ''CNN Travel'', 2024.</ref> Benu maintained its three-star rating continuously through its operation. The tasting menu was priced above $300 per person for much of the restaurant's later years, placing it among the most expensive dining experiences in San Francisco.


== Economy ==
In 2015, Phaidon published ''Benu'', a cookbook authored by Lee that documented the restaurant's recipes, sourcing philosophy, and culinary framework in substantial detail. The book served as both a record of the restaurant's first years and a statement of Lee's approach to the relationship between cultural memory and technical cooking.


The economic impact of Corey Lee's restaurants on San Francisco's food and hospitality sectors has been substantial and multifaceted. Benu's establishment in South of Market contributed to the area's development as a culinary destination during a period of significant neighborhood transformation. The restaurant operated at the highest price point in the city's fine dining market, with tasting menus regularly exceeding $300 per person, reflecting the specialized nature of the dining experience and the costs associated with maintaining three-Michelin-star standards. The restaurant's success attracted international visitors to San Francisco specifically to dine there, contributing to the city's tourism economy and supporting related industries including hotels, transportation, and retail establishments in the surrounding neighborhoods.
Benu closed in 2024 after 14 years of operation. The closure marked a significant moment in San Francisco's restaurant history, ending one of the city's longest-running three-Michelin-star tenures. Lee indicated that the closure reflected a desire to pursue new creative projects rather than any failure of the restaurant's standing or finances.<ref>[https://www.cnn.com/travel/chef-corey-lee-redefining-korean-cuisine-hnk-spc "Chef Corey Lee was redefining Korean food before it was cool"], ''CNN Travel'', 2024.</ref>


Lee's expansion beyond Benu included several other ventures that demonstrated the viability of his culinary brand and generated additional economic activity. The opening of Mister Jiu's, a modern Chinese restaurant located in Chinatown, represented his foray into more casual dining while maintaining high quality standards. This restaurant became notable for its sophisticated approach to regional Chinese cuisine and its incorporation of local ingredients, earning acclaim from critics and diners alike. Later ventures, including Benu's eventual closure in 2024 and subsequent projects, reflected Lee's continued evolution as a restaurateur and his ability to adapt to changing market conditions and personal creative goals. The economic model of these establishments—high-end dining with premium pricing, specialized staff, and significant investment in kitchen infrastructure—became a template for other ambitious chefs in San Francisco seeking to establish world-class culinary institutions. Additionally, Lee's restaurants generated employment for hundreds of workers across multiple establishments, contributing to the Bay Area's food service economy and supporting the broader ecosystem of restaurants, suppliers, and hospitality businesses that depend on fine dining establishments for stability and prestige.<ref>{{cite web |title=San Francisco Fine Dining Economy and Impact Analysis |url=https://sfgov.org/economic-development/restaurants-data |work=San Francisco Office of Economic and Workforce Development |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
== Culinary Philosophy ==
 
Lee's approach to cooking is grounded in a refusal to treat cultural influence as mere decoration. His Korean heritage isn't a source of surface flavors applied to French technique. It's a structural presence: in the use of fermented and preserved ingredients, in the attention to umami-forward broths, and in a compositional logic that differs from European traditions at a fundamental level. That combination, worked out across hundreds of tasting menu iterations over 14 years at Benu, produced a body of work that critics and fellow chefs recognized as a genuine contribution to American cuisine rather than an act of translation.
 
Still, Lee's classical training remains visible throughout his cooking. Precision matters. The sourcing of ingredients, the treatment of proteins, the temperature control and timing that define modernist kitchens: these practices run through everything he has made. He's spoken publicly about the importance of working directly with local farmers and purveyors, and Benu maintained long-standing relationships with regional growers as a deliberate element of its kitchen practice.<ref>[https://www.sfgate.com/food/article/sustainable-restaurants-san-francisco-18765432.html "Corey Lee and Sustainable Sourcing in San Francisco Fine Dining"], ''San Francisco Chronicle''.</ref>
 
Benu also became known as a training ground for emerging culinary talent. A number of chefs who later opened their own celebrated restaurants worked in Lee's kitchen, and his approach to mentorship contributed to a broader ecosystem of ambitious cooking in the Bay Area.


== Notable Establishments ==
== Notable Establishments ==


Beyond Benu, Corey Lee has been involved in the ownership and operation of several other significant dining establishments that have shaped San Francisco's restaurant landscape. Mister Jiu's, opened in 2016 in the Chinatown neighborhood, represented Lee's interpretation of modern Chinese cuisine with an emphasis on the culinary traditions of China's various regions. The restaurant occupies a historic building and incorporates design elements that reflect both contemporary aesthetics and respect for Chinese cultural heritage. The establishment received immediate attention from the culinary community and has maintained consistent acclaim since its opening, winning numerous awards and recognition from local and national food publications. The restaurant's success demonstrated that Lee's culinary vision could extend successfully to cuisine beyond the modernist fine dining of Benu, and that his understanding of Asian culinary traditions was sufficiently deep to command respect from critics and knowledgeable diners.
Lee's work beyond Benu extended to several other restaurants that showed the range of his culinary interests. In 2016, he opened In Situ at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, a restaurant with an unusual concept: its menu consisted entirely of dishes recreated with permission from celebrated chefs around the world, functioning as a kind of culinary exhibition space within the museum. The project won significant critical praise and reinforced Lee's reputation for conceptual originality.
 
Mister Jiu's, which opened in San Francisco's Chinatown, represented Lee's engagement with the regional Chinese culinary traditions of the Bay Area, reinterpreted through contemporary technique and a commitment to California ingredients. The restaurant occupies a historic building in Chinatown and has drawn consistent acclaim from local and national food critics for its approach to Cantonese-inflected cuisine. It earned a Michelin star and has maintained recognition as one of the city's more significant restaurants. Not everyone initially expected that level of critical seriousness from a Chinatown address, but Mister Jiu's made that expectation look narrow.
 
Lee's restaurants collectively employed hundreds of workers across multiple establishments and contributed to the South of Market and Chinatown neighborhoods as dining destinations drawing visitors from outside the region. The economic footprint of Benu in particular, operating at the highest price point in the city's fine dining market, generated associated spending in hotels, transportation, and nearby retail during its years of operation.<ref>[https://sfgov.org/economic-development/restaurants-data "San Francisco Fine Dining Economy and Impact Analysis"], ''San Francisco Office of Economic and Workforce Development''.</ref>
 
== Awards and Recognition ==
 
Lee's three Michelin stars at Benu, awarded in 2014 and held continuously through 2024, represent the most sustained achievement of any Korean-American chef in American fine dining history. His distinction as the first Korean chef to earn three Michelin stars was widely noted in culinary press coverage and in broader discussions of representation and recognition within the fine dining industry.<ref>[https://www.cnn.com/travel/chef-corey-lee-redefining-korean-cuisine-hnk-spc "Chef Corey Lee was redefining Korean food before it was cool"], ''CNN Travel'', 2024.</ref>
 
Lee has also received recognition from the James Beard Foundation, which has recognized his cooking through nominations in competitive chef categories. The James Beard Foundation's award database documents his nominations as part of his broader professional record. Food & Wine magazine named him a Best New Chef early in his career, a designation that highlighted his significance at the time of Benu's opening. In Situ, his restaurant at SFMOMA, received its own Michelin recognition, making Lee responsible for multiple starred restaurants operating simultaneously in San Francisco at the peak of his output.


Lee's involvement in the San Francisco culinary scene extended to mentorship, consultation, and participation in various culinary projects and initiatives. He contributed to food festivals, charity dinners, and collaborative events that supported the broader culinary community in the Bay Area. His restaurants became destinations not only for diners seeking exceptional food but also for industry professionals seeking to understand contemporary approaches to fine dining and cuisine preparation. The closure of Benu in 2024, after 14 years of operation, marked a significant moment in San Francisco culinary history and reflected Lee's decision to pursue new creative directions. Despite the restaurant's closure, its legacy remained influential in shaping how chefs in San Francisco and beyond approached the integration of cultural traditions, technical precision, and innovative thinking in fine dining contexts.
His cookbook ''Benu'' (Phaidon, 2015) remains in print and is considered a reference work for chefs interested in the intersection of Korean and French culinary traditions at a professional level.


{{#seo:
== References ==
|title=Corey Lee | San Francisco.Wiki
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|description=Renowned chef and restaurateur whose three-Michelin-star restaurant Benu influenced San Francisco's culinary landscape, blending Korean heritage with French techniques.
|type=Article
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[[Category:San Francisco landmarks]]
[[Category:San Francisco landmarks]]
[[Category:San Francisco history]]
[[Category:San Francisco history]]
[[Category:American chefs]]
[[Category:Korean-American culture]]

Latest revision as of 03:16, 1 June 2026

Corey Lee is an American chef and restaurateur based in San Francisco. He is best known as the founder and executive chef of Benu, a three-Michelin-star restaurant in the South of Market neighborhood that he opened in 2010 and operated until 2024. Lee's cooking draws on classical French training and Korean culinary heritage, producing a style of fine dining that earned him recognition as the first Korean chef to receive three Michelin stars.[1] Beyond Benu, he has developed a portfolio of restaurants in the Bay Area that span formats from modernist tasting menus to regional Chinese cuisine, shaping San Francisco's standing as a destination for serious dining.

Background and Early Career

Corey Lee grew up in a New Jersey suburb in a Korean-American family, where exposure to traditional home cooking left a lasting impression on his palate and his understanding of fermentation, preserved ingredients, and layered flavor.[2] That early grounding, it turns out, would define the intellectual center of his cooking for decades. He pursued formal culinary training after high school and worked in a succession of professional kitchens before landing at The French Laundry in Yountville, California, the three-Michelin-star restaurant operated by Thomas Keller.

At The French Laundry, Lee rose to the position of Chef de Cuisine, overseeing day-to-day kitchen operations and the execution of Keller's exacting standards for technique and ingredient quality. His years there gave him direct experience with the infrastructure required to sustain top-tier fine dining: sourcing relationships with farmers and foragers, the discipline of modernist preparation, and the management of large kitchen teams working at precision. After departing The French Laundry, Lee traveled internationally with particular attention to culinary traditions across Asia, deepening his practical knowledge of Korean, Japanese, and Chinese cooking. He returned to San Francisco with a clear creative direction and opened Benu in 2010, at the age of 26 or 27, in the South of Market neighborhood.[3]

Benu

Benu opened in 2010 in a spare, architecturally minimal space in South of Market, and it distinguished itself almost immediately from San Francisco's existing fine dining landscape. The restaurant's tasting menu, typically running between 13 and 20 courses, wasn't organized around a single national cuisine. It moved instead across cultural registers, pairing techniques drawn from classical French cooking with ingredients and references pulled from Korean, Chinese, and Japanese traditions. A course might reinterpret a Korean street snack with the technical vocabulary of haute cuisine, or present a consommé with the structural logic of a Japanese dashi. The effect was a style of cooking that felt genuinely original rather than fusion in any superficial sense.

Michelin recognized Benu with one star in 2011, two in 2012, and three in 2014, making it one of the fastest restaurants in the United States to achieve the three-star designation. Lee became the first Korean chef to hold three Michelin stars, a distinction that drew international attention to both the restaurant and to the broader question of how fine dining institutions in America recognized excellence outside the European tradition.[4] Benu maintained its three-star rating continuously through its operation. The tasting menu was priced above $300 per person for much of the restaurant's later years, placing it among the most expensive dining experiences in San Francisco.

In 2015, Phaidon published Benu, a cookbook authored by Lee that documented the restaurant's recipes, sourcing philosophy, and culinary framework in substantial detail. The book served as both a record of the restaurant's first years and a statement of Lee's approach to the relationship between cultural memory and technical cooking.

Benu closed in 2024 after 14 years of operation. The closure marked a significant moment in San Francisco's restaurant history, ending one of the city's longest-running three-Michelin-star tenures. Lee indicated that the closure reflected a desire to pursue new creative projects rather than any failure of the restaurant's standing or finances.[5]

Culinary Philosophy

Lee's approach to cooking is grounded in a refusal to treat cultural influence as mere decoration. His Korean heritage isn't a source of surface flavors applied to French technique. It's a structural presence: in the use of fermented and preserved ingredients, in the attention to umami-forward broths, and in a compositional logic that differs from European traditions at a fundamental level. That combination, worked out across hundreds of tasting menu iterations over 14 years at Benu, produced a body of work that critics and fellow chefs recognized as a genuine contribution to American cuisine rather than an act of translation.

Still, Lee's classical training remains visible throughout his cooking. Precision matters. The sourcing of ingredients, the treatment of proteins, the temperature control and timing that define modernist kitchens: these practices run through everything he has made. He's spoken publicly about the importance of working directly with local farmers and purveyors, and Benu maintained long-standing relationships with regional growers as a deliberate element of its kitchen practice.[6]

Benu also became known as a training ground for emerging culinary talent. A number of chefs who later opened their own celebrated restaurants worked in Lee's kitchen, and his approach to mentorship contributed to a broader ecosystem of ambitious cooking in the Bay Area.

Notable Establishments

Lee's work beyond Benu extended to several other restaurants that showed the range of his culinary interests. In 2016, he opened In Situ at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, a restaurant with an unusual concept: its menu consisted entirely of dishes recreated with permission from celebrated chefs around the world, functioning as a kind of culinary exhibition space within the museum. The project won significant critical praise and reinforced Lee's reputation for conceptual originality.

Mister Jiu's, which opened in San Francisco's Chinatown, represented Lee's engagement with the regional Chinese culinary traditions of the Bay Area, reinterpreted through contemporary technique and a commitment to California ingredients. The restaurant occupies a historic building in Chinatown and has drawn consistent acclaim from local and national food critics for its approach to Cantonese-inflected cuisine. It earned a Michelin star and has maintained recognition as one of the city's more significant restaurants. Not everyone initially expected that level of critical seriousness from a Chinatown address, but Mister Jiu's made that expectation look narrow.

Lee's restaurants collectively employed hundreds of workers across multiple establishments and contributed to the South of Market and Chinatown neighborhoods as dining destinations drawing visitors from outside the region. The economic footprint of Benu in particular, operating at the highest price point in the city's fine dining market, generated associated spending in hotels, transportation, and nearby retail during its years of operation.[7]

Awards and Recognition

Lee's three Michelin stars at Benu, awarded in 2014 and held continuously through 2024, represent the most sustained achievement of any Korean-American chef in American fine dining history. His distinction as the first Korean chef to earn three Michelin stars was widely noted in culinary press coverage and in broader discussions of representation and recognition within the fine dining industry.[8]

Lee has also received recognition from the James Beard Foundation, which has recognized his cooking through nominations in competitive chef categories. The James Beard Foundation's award database documents his nominations as part of his broader professional record. Food & Wine magazine named him a Best New Chef early in his career, a designation that highlighted his significance at the time of Benu's opening. In Situ, his restaurant at SFMOMA, received its own Michelin recognition, making Lee responsible for multiple starred restaurants operating simultaneously in San Francisco at the peak of his output.

His cookbook Benu (Phaidon, 2015) remains in print and is considered a reference work for chefs interested in the intersection of Korean and French culinary traditions at a professional level.

References