Chef Biography
Kathleen Daelemans was born and raised in West Bloomfield, Michigan to food loving parents of Belgian-Neapolitan descent, who would take her every Saturday to a different ethnic market or bakery, then bring the ingredients home to cook. When she was 14, she got a job as a counter girl at the old Henry Yee’s Chinese carryout. She hated it, but every chance she got, she would sneak into the kitchen to help the cooks clean chickens and make egg rolls. She became so good, she was making 600 egg rolls a night.
After graduating from North Farmington High School in 1981, she moved to San Luis Obispo to study small business administration at Cuesta Community College, while working at a restaurant at night. Two years later, in 1983, she was running the restaurant. When the opportunity arose to apprentice at the 4-star Ahwahnee Hotel in Yosemite National Park, who sponsored “Chefs Holiday” with Great Chef Larry Forgione, she jumped at the chance. After three more years apprenticing there, she had already been accepted at the Culinary Institute, but she read about an article on Judy Rodgers and her Zuni Café, and decided that was the kind of restaurant she wanted to work in. She set up an interview and received a job offer, and that is where she stayed for three more years.
In 1992, she received an offer to work at a new hotel under construction in Maui, Hawaii where she opened Café Kula in the Grand Wailea Hotel. In 1994 Great Chefs taped her at the Grand Wailea for their Discovery Channel television series, Great Chefs of Hawaii.
She has since left Hawaii and is an author of several books, and appears on television food shows.