Graduation from The Culinary Institute of America in 2014
The Culinary Institute of America (CIA) has a host of renowned alumni, some of whom we would know from TV if not through dining at Michelin starred or hatted restaurants. The prestigious college has had the likes of Anthony Bourdain, Rocco DiSpirito, Rick Moonen and many more male celebrity chefs walk its campus and slog in its kitchens. The list includes only a few select women such as TV chef Cat Cora.
But more noteworthy for us perhaps is a young Karachi girl who now joins the CIA cadre. Haya Ismail claims to have been “a fat, hungry kid” who “grew up on Burnes Road [food]”. Her love of food took her on a journey which she may well never have imagined for herself.
Although she says she would call her mother an “adequate cook, my nani is an amazing cook.” Spending time in her grandmother’s kitchen, the little sous chef would help concoct simple dishes. “We would make kailay ka saalan and I’d eat it with bread.” She couldn’t get enough of this peculiar but delicious family dish.
Haya Ismail has taken a remarkable journey as a chef, from her grandmother’s kitchen in Pakistan to fine dining international restaurants
Her mother, on the other hand, was of the view that being in the kitchen was more of a waste of time. She stressed on books and on education. Ismail tried to conform to expectations and give the average life a shot. After school, she enrolled into Institute of Business Administration (IBA) and later to an external program for law at SZABIST. “I come from a family with conventional professions,” she says. It was expected that she would follow suit and opt for fields like medicine or law.
When the heart calls, however, nothing but dreams feed the soul. Try as she smight, neither her heart nor her mind was into learning simply from books. “I hated it,” Ismail simply says of her first semester in college. College didn’t seem to click with her calling as much as she didn’t seem to fit in over there.
What felt more like an extension of her was the kitchen at the Avari Towers. In 2010, while having a birthday dinner at Dynasty she spotted a promotion for a Ladies Day at Avari, Ismail tells Eos. “I didn’t know anybody who had a female-friendly kitchen. I thought I’d just give it a try.” Ismail sent her application that same day.