Shaun King tells his own story at Momofuku Las Vegas
Early Japanese training translates into culinary finesse
Shaun King grew up with the funky, fishy, fermented flavors that are among the favorite playthings of chefs these days, but at the time they were a novelty.
Now the executive chef of Momofuku Las Vegas, King is from the quaint college town of San Luis Obispo on California’s central coast. When he was a kid, his step-dad was a gymnast who went to Japan to compete in the early 1980s and came back with Japanese friends and notions that things like rice porridge with pickled vegetables were desirable breakfast items.
“I was like, ‘This is gross. I want Fruity Pebbles.’ But I was eating Japanese breakfast when I was very, very young,” King said.
Meanwhile, on his mother’s side, King’s grandmother was from Norway, a land of fermented and pickled fish that the future chef also was exposed to.
“It’s funny how what I grew up eating really influenced how my food is — a lot of acid, a lot of vegetables, and growing up on the central coast I had the product to do it with,” he said.
Now he’s serving dishes like sea urchin hash browns, cod with fermented crab miso, and giant celebratory platters of salt-and-pepper lobster and shrimp with crunchy garlic and fermented chiles.
“Vegas is a celebration,” he said: People come for bachelor parties, to bet on sporting events or otherwise gather in large groups for expansive meals, and King’s version of Momofuku has struck a chord with them.
“We’ve had so many repeat guests, and you usually don’t have that in Vegas,” he said.
Like many chefs, King was drawn to food when he was a youth, as was a good friend of his, a Japanese American whose grandfather was a master chef.
“I was like 15 years old and we both wanted to learn how to do sushi, essentially,” he said. “But he wouldn’t teach us just sushi. He taught us French cuisine and Italian cuisine, and finally we got to learn a little bit of sushi.”
They were put to work in local ramen shops, sushi bars and teppanyaki places.
“Basically we were just washing rice and doing a lot of vegetable prep and dishwashing,” he said. “I was working at literally the smallest sushi bars in Grover Beach and San Luis. I humbled myself and became a teppanyaki chef four days a week,” he added.
Teppanyaki is griddled food — think Benihana. Not super-sophisticated, but it was a foot in the door.
“I learned Teppanyaki just so I could be around the restaurant,” he said, and he also could entertain his high school friends, including some young ladies who caught the attention of the Japanese chefs.