Chris Cheung is a New York native and grew up in the
heart of Chinatown. He was brought up around great Cantonese food,
where he undoubtedly picked up his affinity for Chinese cuisine.
Right out of school he started working for world-famous chefs like
Jean-Georges Vongerichten, Nobu Matsuhisa, and Masaharu Morimoto.
Later, he became part of the opening kitchen staff at
Jean-Georges,cooking alongside Wylie Dufresne and Didier Virot.Chef
Cheung also had the privilege being Anthony Bourdain's guide to New
York's Chinatowns on the hit show No Reservations and has served as
a guest judge on The Food Network's Chopped andBeat Bobby Flay.His
inspiration for Chinese cooking took him to Shanghai where he
prepared banquets in the country side farming and fishing villages.
There he learned the nuances of Shanghai cuisine and was blown away
by its farm-to-table and sea-to-table style of cooking. Currently,
he is the chef and owner of acclaimed restaurant East Wind Snack
Shop, which has two locations in Brooklyn.
Maneet Chauhan a celebrity chef, author, and judge on the
Food Network's hit show Chopped, and won the James Beard Award of
Excellence winner. Shehas received glowing accolades from a vast
array of media for her globally-inspired culinary acumen. The only
Indian female to ever compete on Iron Chef and lauded by Bon
Appetit, USA Today, Time, Esquire, Travel & Leisure, Gourmet, Town
& Country, Business Week, and O Magazine, as well as garnering a
stunning three-star review from the Chicago Tribune, Chef Chauhan
is a celebrated chef who is an inspiration to many, and a force to
be reckoned with. She authored the bookFlavors of Our World in 2013
and her forthcoming book Chaat:The Best Recipes From the Kitchens,
Markets, and Railways of India published in October 2020.
Praise for Damn Good Chinese Food:
"Having burnished his culinary skills in the kitchens of
Jean-Georges Vongerichten and Nobu Matsuhisa, the chef Chris Cheung
returned to the food of Manhattan’s Chinatown, where he was born
and raised, to create his casual East Wind Snack Shops in
Brooklyn. In 'Damn Good Chinese Food,' his first cookbook, Mr.
Cheung is your guide to Chinatown (as he was for Anthony Bourdain)
and its vibrant markets. His book outlines equipment and
techniques, and gives 50 recipes for dishes from the Chinese
American canon, many with refinements. These include pungent sweet
and sour pork Peking style; three cups cauliflower, which cleverly
swaps out the usual chicken for the vegetable; designer egg drop
soup; briny black bean clams; pork belly bao buns; and many, many
dumplings, explaining the Chinatown pedigree and his personal take.
Be prepared to use MSG; Mr. Cheung makes a cultural argument for
it." —The New York Times
"My friend Chef Chris Cheung is a resident expert in Chinese
cuisine on Beat Bobby Flay. Now that he has published a book,
I can learn how to make dumplings properly!" —Bobby Flay
"With a love for Chinese ingredients, techniques, and flavors,
Chris has rapidly established himself as one of the leading
authorities on Chinese cuisine in the United States. . . . The
recipes and techniques in this book are undoubtedly authentic, but
also approachable and delicious. These dishes will excite you and
quickly become family favorites. I am ready to dive into these
mouthwatering recipes and look forward to cooking up a delicious,
Chris-inspired storm in my own kitchen!" —Maneet Chauhan,
judge, Chopped, winner, Tournament of Champions II, and
author, Chaat
"Without wasting a word, Chris Cheung shares everything he
knows—which is a lot—about shopping for, cooking, and eating
Chinese food in the United States. His natural, engaging voice
comes through on every page of Damn Good Chinese Food, a
refreshingly honest, funny, insightful, and extremely useful
book." —Laurie Woolever, #1 New York Times bestselling
coauthor, Appetites and World Travel, with
Anthony Bourdain; author, Bourdain: The Definitive Oral
Biography
"The stories Cheung shares reflect his upbringing in New York's
Chinatown, and the recipes celebrate the flavors, techniques, and
culture of this delicious neighborhood." —Food & Wine
"Damn Good Chinese Food shines as a celebration of Chinese markets,
the people who run them and shop in them, and the food and
traditions that shape Chinese culture in America." —Plate
Magazine
"Chef Chris Cheung’s East Wind Snack Shop in Brooklyn is known for
its superlative dumplings, but his Chinatown-inspired book goes
beyond those favorites, offering recipes for salt-and-pepper
shrimp, cold sesame noodles, char siu black cod, congee, and more."
—Epicurious
"When it comes to great pizza, people think of Di Fara.
When it comes to great Chinese food, you better know about Chef
Chris Cheung. Domenico DeMarco and
the Di Fara family are big fans of his cooking. We
are so excited about this book!" —Dom, Maggie, and the
whole Di Fara Pizza family
"A look into a window of Chinatown that goes unsung—the
people, the community, and the food! As the owner of one of the
oldest restaurants in Chinatown, I'm totally inspired by Chris's
writing, and the recipes are spot on." —Peter Lee, owner, Hop
Kee Restaurant
"Chris Cheung is the most New York chef I've ever met. Listening to
him speak about growing up in Chinatown is a study in descriptive,
textured storytelling. I can instantly smell and taste the food
that he's talking about. Mott Street in the late 80s and 90s was
where I spent Sunday mornings with my father. Chris's recipes in
Damn Good Chinese Food bring me back to the place and time
that food became the most important thing in my life." —Ilan Hall,
winner, Top Chef; former host, Knife Fight
“My earliest dining memories come from wondrous meals at Chinese
restaurants, where the ingredients, flavors, and aromas captivated
me. Damn Good Chinese Food reminds me of the joy of
discovery. Chris Cheung's inventive and delectable
recipes respect tradition while he adds his
heartfelt personal touches. This is an engaging book to be
treasured.” —Drew Nieporent, restauranteur, Nobu, Batard,
Tribeca Grill
"Chris Cheung taps into that nostalgia of 1970s Chinatown in his
cooking, while bringing a modern sensibility to his recipes. We’re
both NYC kids of the 70s, and while our backgrounds may be
different, we share a deep love for dumplings and buns. And Chris’s
dumplings are divine! I have twice profiled Chris and his
cooking for my weekly food segment, Neighborhood Eats, on WABC
TV, and both times I ate my way through the shoot, gorging on his
delicious creations. His cooking directions are so simple, now even
I can recreate Cantonese classics in my own kitchen! Dumplings,
here I come!" —Lauren Glassberg, WABC TV Anchor and Reporter
"Chef Chris Cheung has spent much of his career honoring his
Chinese heritage by bringing the cuisine of his Chinatown childhood
into the 21st Century. The flavors and techniques are
traditional, but Chris has a way of adding his own finesse, learned
from some of the country’s greatest chefs as well as his own
decades of experience. This book reflects all of that and brings it
to your kitchen." —Brett Thorn, senior editor, Nation's
Restaurant News
“More than damn good! A beautifully written and photographed
journey shared from the vault of Chris Cheung’s soul, where I dare
to imagine his ancestors sit and sip tea, share snacks, and impart
their gems of flavor, techniques, and stories. . . . This book
captures Chris’s unique humor, love for eighties pop culture,
admiration for great Chefs, Chinese traditions, family, community,
and a genuine respect for food and the intersection of the human
experience. You’ll smile, laugh, ohh, ahh, marvel, and be
moved by his recipes, stories, and anecdotes. Should you add this
to your cookbook collection? Damn skippy!” —Jameeale Arzeno,
culinary director, James Beard Foundation 2018–2020
Praise for Chef Chris Cheung:
"Thanks for making it all make brilliant sense." —Anthony Bourdain,
on Chris Cheung's knowledge of New York's Chinatowns
"A skilled craftsman." —The Village Voice
"I’ve come to know Chris as a custodian of Chinatown’s food
traditions and Cantonese-American cooking. But he’s also a
thoughtful interpreter of Chinese cuisine. (Have you tried his
Incredible Har Gow? Why not?) There’s a reason I’m always happy to
go out of my way to meet a good friend at the southern entrance to
Prospect Park—because I can grab food from East Wind Snack
Shop." —Chris Crowley, writer, New York Magazine
"Many chefs claim Chinatown as a point of reference, but Chris
Cheung was raised in its old diners, dim sum halls,
fishmongers, and grocery stores. His faithful yet inventive cooking
is an essential form of storytelling and historical recovery."
—Herb Tam, curator, The Museum of Chinese in America
Praise for East Wind Snack Shop
"The absolute best dumplings in New York." —New York Magazine
"A homage to [Chinatown's] bygone working-class coffeehouses,
run by immigrants who, like Mr. Cheung’s grandparents, came from
Taishan, in Guangdong Province." —The New York Times
"I picked up my life and moved just to be closer to this Brooklyn
dumpling spot. . . . I looked down at my table full of gorgeous
stir-fried vegetables, plump dumplings, and pork belly bao, and
knew: I was home." —Bon Appétit
"Brooklyn's best (Bao) buns." —Brooklyn Magazine
"A dumpling destination." —Grub Street
"Stellar dumplings . . . The pork dumplings and dry-aged beef
potstickers are certainly fantastic, but it’s chef Chris Cheung’s
gwa bao-style bun, which places caramelized pork belly on top of
the bun rather than inside of it, that has earned the most street
cred among in-the-know diners." —Eater
"Dumplings aren't just a lowbrow option for a quick bite—especially
with a Nobu vet doing the steaming. That's the story behind East
Wind Snack Shop, a brand new chopsticks spot in Windsor Terrace
specializing in dumplings, buns and other quickly inhaled Chinese
foods." —Gothamist
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |