Repertoire with Chef Sammy Monsour cover art

Repertoire with Chef Sammy Monsour

Repertoire with Chef Sammy Monsour

Written by: Heritage Radio Network
Listen for free

Repertoire is a traveling video podcast series hosted by Sammy Monsour—a Michelin award-winning chef, two-time cookbook author, food activist, and instructor in the Culinary Institute of America’s Master’s in Sustainable Food Systems program.

Each episode, Sammy sits down with some of the most influential chefs in the world for unfiltered conversations about food, culture, creativity, and sustainability. From kitchen rituals and philosophies to personal stories and behind-the-pass realities, Repertoire dives into the ideas and experiences that shape who we are as cooks and as people. Expect big laughs, honest talk, and plenty of delicious moments along the way.

🎙️ New episodes every other Tuesday—audio streaming everywhere + full & short video episodes on YouTube, Instagram and TikTok.

Art Cooking Food & Wine Social Sciences
Episodes
  • S1E14 Nick Dixon
    Mar 4 2026

    In this episode of Repertoire, I travel to South Boston, Massachusetts to sit down with Nick Dixon—chef, restaurateur, and one of the creative forces behind several beloved neighborhood restaurants that have helped shape the dining culture of Southie.

    Nick’s cooking is rooted in live-fire technique and honest ingredients, drawing inspiration from wood-fired ovens, open grills, and the kind of food that feels both deeply comforting and thoughtfully crafted. Through his restaurants, he’s built spaces that reflect the spirit of the neighborhood—places where great food, strong hospitality, and community all intersect.

    We dive into:

    • The evolution of South Boston’s restaurant scene and how the neighborhood has changed over the years.

    • Building restaurants that feel authentic to place, where locals feel ownership of the space.

    • The craft behind wood-fired ovens and live-fire cooking, and why flame changes the way food tastes.

    • How running multiple restaurants requires balancing creativity with operational discipline.

    • The difference between cooking to impress versus cooking to make people genuinely happy.

    • The importance of hospitality culture, mentorship, and building teams that grow together.

    Nick and I talk about what it really takes to build restaurants that last—places rooted in neighborhood identity, consistency, and the quiet confidence that comes from knowing exactly what kind of food you want to cook.

    It’s a conversation about craft, community, and the evolving identity of Boston’s restaurant scene.

    Watch the full episode on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcasts.

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 43 mins
  • S1E13 Charbel Hayek
    Feb 17 2026

    In this episode of Repertoire, I travel to Hollywood, California to sit down with Charbel Hayek—Lebanese-born chef, Top Chef Middle East & North Africa winner, and the creative force behind LAYR, a restaurant that channels the hospitality, flavor, and spirit of the Levant through a distinctly Los Angeles lens.

    Charbel began cooking in Beirut at just 14 years old, working alongside his mother before refining his craft in France and later training under Josiah Citrin at the two-Michelin-starred Mélisse. At 24, he won Top Chef MENA, launching him into international recognition. Now, at 28, he’s opening ambitious, large-scale restaurants across Los Angeles and Miami while remaining deeply grounded in his roots.

    We dive into:

    • Growing up in Beirut, shaped by resilience, nightlife, instability, and an unbreakable cultural pride.

    • Starting young, putting in the hours early, and why the first ten years of sacrifice define your trajectory.

    • Winning Top Chef at 24—and why television is not a ticket, but an opportunity you must be ready for.

    • The immigrant mentality: loving where you’re from while recognizing the scale of opportunity in America.

    • Fear as fuel—why he runs toward intensity instead of away from it in high-pressure kitchens.

    • Balancing old-school French discipline with modern leadership and hospitality.

    • Reclaiming Lebanese cuisine on the global stage—modernizing dishes without losing their identity.

    • Why sharing food—mezze, tabbouleh without bulgur, grape leaves braised with lamb neck—is about connection, not just flavor.

    • Opening multiple restaurants at once and accepting that entrepreneurship comes with risk, doubt, and relentless work.

    • Rap music, Eminem’s “Lose Yourself,” and how cultural energy fuels competitive fire.

    Charbel and I talk about partnership, ambition, discipline, faith, and the responsibility of leadership. We get into what it means to open restaurants in today’s fragile industry, how Covid reshaped risk tolerance, and why saying “yes” to opportunity—when aligned with your values—can change the entire arc of your career.

    At its core, this is a conversation about identity and intention—about carrying your culture with pride while building something new in one of the most competitive food cities in the world.

    Watch the full episode on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcasts.

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 8 mins
  • S1E12 Jason Fullilove
    Feb 3 2026

    In this episode of Repertoire, I travel to Redondo Beach, California to sit down with Jason Fullilove—chef, restaurateur, entrepreneur, and one of the most community-minded forces quietly shaping Los Angeles hospitality.

    Jason’s path spans more than two decades and multiple worlds. A Culinary Institute of America alum, he climbed the ranks from high-volume New York kitchens to the Ritz-Carlton in St. Thomas, then into some of L.A.’s most respected dining rooms before launching Barbara Jean LA, where he brought African American soul food into a fine-dining conversation with precision and pride. Today, he’s expanding beyond restaurants with Tumi Coco, a clean, all-natural hot sauce built around turmeric, coconut oil, and flavor-first cooking—part pantry staple, part personal philosophy.

    But what makes Jason different isn’t just the résumé—it’s the way he shows up for people.

    We dive into:

    • Growing up between Cleveland and Zambia, and how early memories of scarcity, travel, and communal meals shaped his relationship to food.

    • The jump from music and rap to professional kitchens—and how hip-hop still fuels his creative energy.

    • Building Barbara Jean from scratch and discovering the power of community, relationships, and reputation.

    • Why networking in hospitality isn’t transactional—it’s about showing up, giving back, and playing the long game.

    • Creating Tumi Coco as a chef tool: clean ingredients, no preservatives, and food that supports health and performance.

    • Martial arts, discipline, and how training the body sharpens the mind in high-pressure kitchens.

    • Mentorship, patience, and why young cooks should chase skill over titles.

    • His next chapter: a paratha-driven café and listening bar concept, blending Indian flavors, vinyl culture, cocktails, and late-night hospitality.

    Jason and I talk about energy, generosity, and what it means to build a career rooted in service—to food, to culture, and to the people around you. It’s a conversation about longevity, intention, and creating spaces where everyone feels welcome at the table.

    Watch the full episode on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcasts.

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 14 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
No reviews yet