Top 102 Quotes & Sayings by Roy Choi - Page 2

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a South Korean chef Roy Choi.
Last updated on April 20, 2025.
Chefs don't have a union. We don't have a Screen Actor's Guild.
I'm a little old-school in that I think there's some value in the classics and the steps of achieving a certain profession. If we start slanging the word 'chef' on anybody and everybody who cooks, it takes away a lot.
Being a cook, there's always pressure - not for your ego but for people to love your food. — © Roy Choi
Being a cook, there's always pressure - not for your ego but for people to love your food.
I go by 'Papi' on the streets.
What if every high-caliber chef told our investors that for every fancy restaurant we build, it would be a requirement to build one in the hood as well?
When you never see yourself in the mainstream format, you are stripped of the strength of your identity.
Korean food is primarily based on herbs and shoots and sprouts. There's no pasture land in Korea; we eat like Hobbits.
I'm a quiet person in real life.
If you look at my life, I wasn't just poor; I was rich and poor.
Kogi changed what a generation eats, introducing people to fermentation and different vegetables and flavors.
I have a tendency to trail off in conversations. I don't look up at people sometimes when I talk or cook, and those are all pretty bad no-no's being in front of the camera.
In mainstream media, everything gets turned into a stereotype of ourselves.
Even as a kid I wasn't, like, a natural entertainer, where I would gather everyone around me and then sing or something at family parties.
For us in Asia, fermented, bubbly, creamy things are just the norm. — © Roy Choi
For us in Asia, fermented, bubbly, creamy things are just the norm.
I dream like a shaman.
I don't have a boss. I don't answer to anybody. I do everything that I want to do out of the purity of making people happy.
American barbecue is all slow and low, you know, or low and slow, as they say down in the South, in Texas. But Korean barbecue is thinner cuts of meat.
I didn't just grow up lowriding: I grew up lowriding and also in mansions in Orange County.
My restaurants are about community and about sharing and about warmth.
When Kogi started, I was dead broke, selling tacos on the street just to survive.
I don't know if I'll ever be as good as I was when I started Kogi, but I strive for that.
Everything I do is like tough love; everything I put out there in the universe is me trying to feed you. I really care.
I know what it's like to be a teenager in Orange County. I know what it's like to be a kid in L.A. I know what it's like to not have any money and have your lights turned off. I know what it's like to live in a house with five rooms.
I want to reshape fast food in America.
I was a salary man for so many years. I never had to worry about the ins and outs of business or entrepreneurship or funding. I just had to show up and do my job. And then, all of a sudden, I was having to be responsible for my own business.
The Korean taco was a phenomenon... It just came out of us. We didn't really think about it.
I don't really care about job security.
I was a latchkey kid, from 4 or 5 years old.
I don't really do that much office work. I just go to the office, and I'm like Steve Carell in 'The Office.' You know, like, I just go around and like - I don't know what I do in the office. I look at paperwork and act like I'm understanding what's going on there, and I shake my head and put my hand on my chin and like, 'Hmm.'
I've lived through a lot of different neighborhoods. — © Roy Choi
I've lived through a lot of different neighborhoods.
People think that being Korean is all one thing.
My parents worked and sold and hustled; they were gone from the morning, and I pretty much took care of myself. But in a Korean household, you're always eating with your family no matter what, and you're always cooking. And our food is not one you can just open a package and eat right away; a lot of our food takes time to develop.
I make food as affordable as possible.
I'll never be able to outlive Kogi. Kogi is a beast.
You have to believe in something, and you have to believe in the things that you feel and find value in those things, and not be swayed all the time. Maybe you're gonna get swayed 90% of the time, to keep those things submerged, but you can't distrust yourself 100% of the time.
I grew up around so many different people in so many different neighborhoods, but the Latino heritage, the neighborhoods, and people have always been a part of my life, ever since I was a kid.
A lot of my friend's mothers and parents worked at Paramount Studios, so I would always go. I met the Fonz when I was really young, like four or five years old. I was always around people in entertainment all the time throughout my whole life.
I bet a chef could get more pussy than a guitar player right now.
For me, I never abandoned the truck. Even though I’ve opened other things, the truck is still the lifeblood of who I am. That’s because I enjoy it. I believe in it. It’s everything that I am.
This is the premiere food symposium in the world. To quote you guys: 'Intended to invoke a sense of courage and urgency...Enabling this year's symposium to become a venue where we can reflect on the stories and ideas that no one usually gets the opportunity to tell.' So I stand here with the guts to ask you, please, let's do something. Let's do something and feed those that we're not reaching collectively.
Sometimes, in the deepest moments, there are no words. There is only food. — © Roy Choi
Sometimes, in the deepest moments, there are no words. There is only food.
Through that windshield I saw a city that didn’t know it was hungry and a reflection of a guy who was FREE.
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