As the Norway-based Singaporean chef celebrates a milestone year personally and professionally, he opens up about the toughest moments of his career and why failing is not an option
Mathew Leong turns 30 this December, but it’s not only this milestone that makes this year particularly significant.
At the start of the year, the Singaporean chef and 2024 Gen.T Leader of Tomorrow married his girlfriend of three years, Jolynn Chan. Chan also officially moved from Singapore to Stavanger, Norway, where Leong is based, with the couple’s monochrome coat husky, Frosty.
In May, Re-naa, the seafood-based restaurant in Stavanger where Leong has been executive chef since 2022, received its third Michelin star. This comes four years after the restaurant received its second star and eight years after it became the first establishment outside of Norway’s capital of Oslo to get a star.
Leong also announced that he will be part of a star-studded culinary team representing Singapore at Bocuse d’Or 2025 in Lyon, France next January. He first competed in the biennial championship—known as the “Olympics” for cooking—in 2021 at age 26, which made him Singapore’s youngest-ever representative.
“Turning thirty, for me, means a new year to push myself harder,” says Leong.
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Learning the ropes early on
As a child, Leong would help his mother out in the kitchen and enjoyed the hands-on process of prepping the ingredients and cooking. At 13, his Norwegian salmon dish earned him first place in a cooking contest at school. This victory caught the eye of renowned chef Jimmy Chok, formerly of Salt and Coriander Leaf.
Chok invited Leong to his kitchen and personally cooked him a meal. The experience of seeing the culinary team in action proved to be transformative and cemented in Leong’s mind his ambition to become a chef. “After the day trip, I told myself and my parents that when I’m done [with school], I will become a chef and contact [Chok eventually],” Leong recalls.
He committed to those words and held onto Chok’s name card for three years. After graduating from secondary school, he reached out to Chok and worked with him for some time before enrolling into hospitality school Shatec.
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