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Career : Saran and tandoor master Hemant Mathur are the
co-executive chefs of Dévi, the 75-seat upscale
restaurant in New York City, which together they have owned since
October 2007. Offering the authentic flavors of Indian home cooking
as well as dishes inspired by Sarans cookbooks, Dévi
received a Michelin one-star rating in2007 and 2008,as well as a three-star
rating from New York Magazine and two stars from The New York Times.
Already a respected food authority at age 35, Saran is making great
contributions to furthering appreciation of Indian food in America.
Most recently, The Culinary Institute of America named him Chairman,
Asian Culinary Studies for its World Cuisines Council. In March 2006,
Sodexho, Inc. named him its first-ever International Concept
and Brand Development Partner to work side-by-side with Sodexho
chefs for culinary training and business development with a focus on
health and wellness.
He has been featured in such publications as Food & Wine, Bon
Appétit, Fine Cooking, Travel & Leisure, Condé Nast
Traveler, Departures, InStyle, Metropolitan Home, Parade, Newsweek,
US News & World Report, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, The
New York Times, The Washington Post, New York Magazine, Los Angeles
Times, Chicago Tribune, Miami Herald, Minneapolis Star Tribune,
Nations Restaurant News, Chef Magazine, Economic Times of
India. He is a contributing authority to Food Arts.
Television and radio appearances include: NBC Today;
Travel Channels Epicurious TV; FOX9 Minneapolis
with Andrew Zimmern; FOX4 Good Day Dallas; BBC Radio
The World; APM The Splendid Table; WBEZ-FM
"848 with Steve Dolinsky"; WHYY-FM "A Chef's Table
with Jim Coleman"; KGO Radio "Dining Around with Gene
Burns", among many others. Saran is also a featured chef in the
national public television series How To Cook Everything:
Bittman Takes On Americas Chefs (2005) and Food
Trip with Todd English (2007).
Saran has taught all over the country privately and for such culinary
centers as Sur La Table (nationwide), Institute for Culinary
Education, Williams-Sonoma at Time Warner Center (NY), Cooks of
Crockus Hill (MN), Central Market (TX), The Kitchen Store at J.K.
Adams (VT) and Aprons Cooking School at Publix (FL and GA). He
has spoken at conferences at the Culinary Institute of America;
Healthy Kitchens, Healthy Lives conferences organized by
Harvard Medical School Osher Institute and CIA; and the 39th Annual
Smithsonian Folklife Festival, among others. In 2006, he led a
culinary tour of India for Sur La Table and has been a guest chef on
Holland America Line. He has been a featured chef at The Epcot®
International Food & Wine Festival and The Gourmet Institute; and
will participate in The 2008 South Beach Wine & Food Festival and
the inaugural Food & Wine Festival at National Harbor (May 2008)
in Washington, D.C.
In 2008, he will launch The American Masala Collection of porcelain
dinnerware and kitchenware made by Wade Ceramics, a producer of high-quality
porcelain goods for nearly 200 years based in Burslem, England.
While food is a lifelong love for Saran, he began his professional
career in art. After studying at the venerable Sir J.J. School of
Arts in Bombay, he moved to New York City in 1993 to study at the
School of Visual Arts. He was manager at a Metropolitan Museum of Art
store, a buyer for Bergdorf Goodman, and later director of retail
merchandising for the home collection at Henri Bendel. While the
business of art occupied his days, his nights were filled by cooking
elaborate meals for an ever-growing crowd of friends who loved his
food and urged Saran to teach cooking classes and cater events.
By 1997, Saran joined the staff of NYUs Department of Food and
Nutrition, teaching what became some of their most popular classes.
He also started a small catering business that became one of New
Yorks hottest catering companies as heralded by New York
Magazine in 1999. The highlight of his catering career, says Saran,
was cooking the first Indian meal ever served at Carnegie Hall for a
host of international celebrities and dignitaries in honor of the
50th anniversary of Indias independence in 1997.
When he is not on the road teaching and learning, Saran enjoys
working on his 68-acre American Masala Farm in upstate New York. |
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