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So now it's Redzepi's turn in the barrel

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So now it's Redzepi's turn in the barrel

by Jenise » Mon Mar 09, 2026 4:45 pm

Many of you would have read the NYT's new hit piece. Here's some add-on from Eater.com:

What happens after the Noma report?

Over the weekend, the New York Times’s Julia Moskin published a major new report detailing years of alleged physical and psychological violence at Noma, the René Redzepi-led restaurant that has repeatedly attained the industry’s highest accolades. Moskin interviewed more than 35 former Noma employees who worked at the restaurant between 2009 and 2017, who shared experiences like stories of being subjected to physical violence by Redzepi — including claims of being jabbed with barbecue forks, punched in the face and ribs, and slammed into walls — as well as public shaming rituals in which Redzepi reportedly ridiculed cooks and made threats of blacklisting, deportation, and other forms of retaliation.

After years of swirling rumors, many people in the industry feel the report is long overdue. It’s not the first time that similar allegations have been levied against Redzepi, who in 2015 admitted to Lucky Peach that he’d been “a bully for a large part of my career.” (“I’ve yelled and pushed people. I’ve been a terrible boss at times,” he said at the time.) In another Noma story from 2023, Moskin described the chef as “famously rageful [and] mercurial” in his younger years. Noma has been forced to address its workplace issues several times in the past, including in 2013, when the restaurant faced backlash after allegations that it had blacklisted former workers, and in 2022, following outcry for its massive use of unpaid labor. (The restaurant began paying its interns in 2023.)

But Noma’s pricey forthcoming residency in Los Angeles, opening this Wednesday at $1,500 a ticket, has led to renewed scrutiny of Noma and what it represents in the dining world, as well as calls for accountability from Redzepi. Most notably in recent months, that’s come from Jason Ignacio White, the former head of Noma’s fermentation lab, who has been sharing stories of his own experiences at Noma and collecting others’ since early February, culminating in the website noma-abuse.com.

Redzepi issued a statement on Instagram this weekend, writing in part: “Although I don’t recognize all details in these stories, I can see enough of my past behavior reflected in them to understand that my actions were harmful to people who worked with me.” He addressed having used physical aggression, “where I shouted and pushed people, acting in ways that are unacceptable.” He cites the ingrained culture of “shouting, humiliation, and fear” in kitchens when he started cooking, and said he turned to therapy over the past decade to manage his anger. This narrative has been central to Redzepi’s image in recent years: A 2022 Times of London feature described the chef as having “conquered his rage” with therapy. In that story, Redzepi claimed that his temper had been limited to “shouting and screaming” and that he had never hit any of his workers.

While Redzepi’s supporters, who can be found in the comments of his statement, commend the chef for his “courage” to “reflect” — referencing the “ghosts” of the past, the intensity of kitchens, and the pressures of high standards — many members of the industry aren’t buying Redzepi’s apology, which was published prior to Moskin’s report. “The statement is nothing more than a strategically timed act aimed at managing reputation, and protecting brand and financial sponsorial funnels,” wrote Lisa Dunbar, who writes about hospitality work culture on social media. (Her call-out of exploitative structures in fine dining recently prompted a public rebuttal from Noma alum Christian Puglisi.)

The pandemic period, which revealed many similar cases of workplace violations and abuse, led to a reassessment of the chef-auteur narrative and greater skepticism about putting chefs on public pedestals, as many chefs once lauded as geniuses have also been outed as problematic figures. Redezpi himself has remained relatively unscathed until now: Noma’s months-long LA residency sold out in just three minutes in January.

The website noma-abuse.com currently claims “9.2 million views” and yet “0 held accountable.” That’s the question that remains after Moskin’s report: What does accountability mean here, especially when Redzepi’s influence persists across the industry in so many ways? Noma’s residency is still booked solid, and the restaurant will no doubt remain a paragon for a particular type of young chef. As Mehmet Çekirge, a former Noma intern, told Moskin, the culture of violence extended beyond Redzepi alone: “René raised a generation of bullies, and they bullied us.”

This definitely isn’t the end of the current Noma reckoning: On Wednesday, March 11, White’s protests at Noma’s LA residency will begin.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov
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Re: So now it's Redzepi's turn in the barrel

by Mike Filigenzi » Mon Mar 09, 2026 10:11 pm

It will be interesting to see how this all plays out. The new NYT piece describes some pretty insane behavior. Apparently, he went so far as to crouch under a counter in the open kitchen so that he could poke one of his employees in the leg with a barbeque fork. The guy is clearly a genius whose culinary reputation has endured, but I guess we'll see if he can keep selling wildly expensive dinners after this. I can't imagine I'll ever have an opportunity to eat anything he makes, but I'll pass if it ever happens.
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Re: So now it's Redzepi's turn in the barrel

by Jenise » Tue Mar 10, 2026 10:29 am

Yeah, I read the NYT piece. There's another on NY Mag's Grub Street. And this is the guy who trained Blaine Wetzel who Julia Moskin wrote an almost identical piece about a few years ago.

What do you think of the deal they make about not paying "interns"? As you probably know the system is called staging, and it's a deep European tradition. Whether fair or not, that's how and why it exists--temporary on the job training. Not exactly the crime it's made out to be here in the U.S.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov
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Re: So now it's Redzepi's turn in the barrel

by Paul Winalski » Tue Mar 10, 2026 12:00 pm

Unpaid internship has a very long tradition in skilled crafts. It used to be called apprenticeship. Internship is commonplace in the computer programming field, but interns are paid--albeit less than full-time programmers/software engineers and without benefits such as health insurance. A year of internship is pretty much mandatory for medical doctors in the US, with little pay and very long hours.

It looks like the restaurant biz is one of the few that still has unpaid internship. But then again they don't pay their service staff properly, either, forcing them to rely on tips.

-Paul W.
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Re: So now it's Redzepi's turn in the barrel

by Mike Filigenzi » Tue Mar 10, 2026 9:43 pm

Paul Winalski wrote:It looks like the restaurant biz is one of the few that still has unpaid internship.

-Paul W.


For better or for worse, Paul, this is definitely not the case. Many businesses now expect young people to come in as unpaid interns with hopes of getting a permanent position later on. My daughter started out working for a non-profit as an unpaid intern. This lasted about six months before she was brought in as a part-time employee, and later as a full-timer.For the last few years, the job market has been poor for kids coming out of college, so many are just forced to go this route if they want a job in a competitive field. For businesses, this is a cheap way to screen for talent. For young people trying to get their first step onto the ladder, it sucks
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Re: So now it's Redzepi's turn in the barrel

by Jenise » Wed Mar 11, 2026 7:46 pm

So now American Express, who purchased seats at the exclusive Noma L.A. dinner and gave them as gifts, has now pulled out as sponsor and so has another company. Others will surely follow. It's turning into an interesting disaster.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov

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