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Charbel Hayek

Beirut native and Top Chef MENA champion Charbel Hayek showcases refined Eastern Mediterranean cuisine in Los Angeles at Ladyhawk and Laya, drawing on influences from his upbringing, training, and global culinary experiences.
Charbel Hayek 1
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About the Chef

Chef Charbel Hayek knew from an early age that cooking was his calling. “I grew up in a house where there was always good food around,” says the Beirut-born chef. “I wasn't good at school at all. In fact, I hated school, so I just wanted a way to escape.” He found that escape in the kitchen with his mother, a private chef, and by age 15 had charted his path.

“I knew if I wanted to be the best, I had to work with the best,” says Hayek, who began his career with chef Nicolas Audi. He spent six months there cleaning chicken bones to make broth before being trusted with a knife — an experience that taught him to appreciate the process. “I think learning to put your head down and just work and enjoy whatever you have in hand is the most important thing.” Today, even with a large kitchen team at his side, he still enjoys the simple tasks of peeling garlic and chopping onions.

From Lebanon, Hayek traveled to France to study at the prestigious École de Ferrières before moving to Los Angeles, where he honed his skills under Josiah Citrin at Mélisse. “Every chef needs his first opportunity, and it's your first deal that’s the toughest to get. But when you get it, the rest gets easier.”

For Hayek, that break came years after winning the fifth season of Top Chef Middle East and North Africa, filmed in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. “It gave me huge exposure in the MENA region, but I was living in the US, so I couldn't really take advantage of it.” Two years later, he competed on Top Chef: World All-Stars, joining winners from across the globe. “That was great exposure for me, even though I didn't win. It put me on the map.”

Soon after, Kimpton La Peer Hotel in West Hollywood approached Hayek to helm its restaurant. In 2023, he opened Ladyhawk, showcasing the flavors of his home region, including dishes that helped him win Top Chef. The chic West Hollywood spot earned critical acclaim, and in 2024 he debuted Laya in Hollywood.

Inside the Kitchen: Seven Questions with Laya and Ladyhawk's Charbel Hayek

It’s a very good question, and I feel like when it comes to that kind of question, the answer should be something you don’t mind eating every day, right? It’s gotta be the za’atar man’oushe at Ladyhawk. It’s my signature. I mean, I can’t help myself. Every time I’m at Ladyhawk—like, almost every day—it makes me a bit fat, but it’s worth it.

It’s the food of the poor, technically. It’s a very cheap flatbread, folded together, and we usually eat it for breakfast. It’s a bread that has za’atar. Za’atar is like a wild thyme mixed with sesame, sumac, and extra virgin olive oil. And then you bake it, and then you just enjoy it.

The best way to eat it, and this is how I grew up eating it, is you open it and put some labneh in it, some slices of tomato, mint, cucumber, olives—all this kind of stuff—and you make it like a sandwich. Delicious. It’s aromatic, it’s everything you want for your palate when you eat it, right? Salty, tangy.

I wanted to have this item on the Ladyhawk menu because I wanted it to scream, ‘Yes! This is Chef Charbel’s food,’ but I also wanted to elevate it a bit, so I went the extra mile. I made a dough fermented for 48 hours, and then I got the best za’atar you can ever get, imported from Lebanon. I import Lebanese olive oil, too.

So I’m trying to make it as authentic as I can, and then, once it’s baked, I do toppings of labneh and tomato sauce made from onion, garlic, tomato, pomegranate molasses, or spice. It’s very tangy and delicious. And then the third topping is herb purée made from parsley, mint, and basil, and it looks like the same color of the Lebanese flag—white, red, and green—and it has all the flavors that usually go into za’atar, but in a bread-and-butter kind of dip. Every time I work at Ladyhawk, I have it. I tell the guys, make me one. Sometimes I take one home.

There’s a dish that my mom used to make—and she still makes it once in a while—that I believe was one of the reasons I was attracted to cooking. She used to make it almost every Christmas. It’s a braised leg of lamb. We call it gigot d’agneau in French, and it’s braised with red wine and carrots and apples and shallots and all the goodies around it.

There is something about reducing red wine—particularly the smell of it—that is so good that till today, I swear to God, every single time I smell it, it takes me back to waking up on Christmas Day, because the whole house smelled like the red wine reduction.

Fine dining is a meal that you have once a month, maximum. It’s something you won’t mind waiting two months to do. I’ll give you an example: when I proposed to my wife, I went to a Michelin-starred restaurant in Dubai, and it was one of the best meals of my life.

I remember it till today. I keep thinking about it. It was so expensive, and whatever you want to call it, but still today, I’m like, it was worth every penny. It’s an experience—you sit, you eat for three hours, and they give you something to take home with you.

I have a couple of openings in the pipeline, but eventually I want to open a restaurant that’s going to be pure fine dining, like a chef’s table. That’s the way to go.

My goals are so big. It kind of keeps me up at night because it’s having a restaurant in almost every city and being a worldwide chef. I don’t think I’m meant to be one chef for one spot. The potential is huge, and I’m already on the way. I’m opening a restaurant in San Clemente by September, and by the end of the year, we’re opening in Vegas.

There are a lot of upcoming projects in the pipeline that it’s not the right time to talk about. But yeah, I want to do fast food, like I already have a spot in Kuwait doing shawarma. It’s shawarma and fatteh sandwiches. I love to cook, and it doesn’t have to be fine dining. It doesn’t have to be fast food. It’s any kind of cuisine, any kind of concept.

I don’t want only people who have a lot of money to come eat at my place. I want people who don’t have money but follow me and like to try my food. And yeah, you can have a sandwich, and that’s my food, and that’s the same thing.

Somni. It’s a fine dining spot that I cannot wait to try. I just need to find time.

You have to be competitive. You gotta be that guy, and I have it in me. I want to compete with chefs who don’t even know me yet. To love it so much I am addicted to it. That’s the only thing I’m good at.

I believe in this Japanese term Kaizen, that you only have to be good at one thing, and the rest will follow. I just focus on one thing.

It’s gotta be good New York–style pizza… every time I go to New York, I come back 10 pounds heavier.

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