Best pastry chef – Mandy Siu Yuen-sang: The sweet taste of success at L’Envol, The St. Regis Hong Kong
- Pastry chef Mandy Siu is behind the exquisite French-inspired desserts at L’Envol
- She studied cooking at the Vocational Training Centre in Hong Kong before working in some of the city’s top restaurants
Her desserts are deliciously light yet complex, making the most of seasonal flavours, with each new dessert taking weeks to perfect as she strives to balance taste, texture, temperature, colour and presentation.
Pastry chef Mandy Siu Yuen-sang, who creates beautifully presented French-inspired desserts at L’Envol, The St. Regis Hong Kong, won 100 Top Tables’ Best Pastry Chef award for her delicious and exceptional confections.
“I was surprised and at first I didn’t believe I had won,” says Siu, who at 33 has worked under some of the world’s most celebrated chefs. “Ringo Chan, who won last year, is someone I have always looked up to and now I have won.”
Siu has been cooking since she was a child, taking lessons while still in primary school. “But it was when I was about 15 years old that I fell in love with pastry,” recalls Siu, who continually strives to perfect her craft.
“I like Chinese sweet soup occasionally but I love French pastries. I eat them every day because that is what I make every day! I used to go to France once a year before the pandemic happened, as I wanted to stay updated on how cooking styles are evolving, especially with taste and texture. “For example, they use less sugar now but still keep the quality and taste.”
Siu studied cooking at the Vocational Training Centre in Hong Kong before working in some of the city’s top restaurants. “I chose to stay in Hong Kong after studying, instead of going to Japan or Paris,” says Siu. “I was lucky to have a chance to work at L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon in Hong Kong under then executive chef Tadashi Nakamura, who was one of my most important mentors. I learned the skills of a good pastry chef from him. “It was tough. I worked there for two years, and when I look back, that was the time I learned the most.”
From there she went on to work at her first hotel, The Ritz-Carlton Hong Kong, as part of the opening team under executive chef Peter Find. “Robuchon was a small restaurant but at The Ritz-Carlton I had to learn to work in a big team. It was new to me, I was excited and young, and I learned how they operated all the six outlets,” says Siu.