
The Food Chain Is kitchen culture changing?
Apr 1, 2026
Manon Fleury, Paris head chef and co-founder fighting kitchen violence, Preeti Mistry, California executive chef with 25 years tackling toxic workplaces, and Jun Tanaka, London Michelin chef focused on positive culture. They debate whether brutal hierarchies are fading. They describe shifts from fear to rules, meetings and feedback. They give practical tips for building fair, respectful kitchens.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
New Junior Humiliated Until They Improve
- Jun Tanaka described being relentlessly berated as a new junior in Michelin kitchens until he cried before shifts and only stopped being targeted once he got fast enough.
- That experience shaped his promise to run his own kitchens without making staff feel alone or unsupported.
Woman Chef Leaves After Daily Screaming Culture
- Preeti Mistry recalled being one of the few women in kitchens where colleagues underestimated her and a chef's daily screaming made staff 'shake' with fear.
- She quit a job by emailing HR and not showing up, later realising after #MeToo that the workplace was toxic, not her fault.
Physical Abuse Was Commonplace In Kitchens
- Manon Fleury said violence was present in every kitchen she worked in, including respected ones, giving examples of physical abuse like hot purée thrown at a cook's face.
- She treats this as systemic rather than accidental and co-founded Bondir to prevent such violence.
