Award-winning Melbourne chef Greg Malouf dies aged 64

Melbourne celebrity chef and author Greg Malouf has died aged 64, triggering an outpouring of grief from the Australian culinary community.

Greg Malouf - Figure 1
Photo The Sydney Morning Herald

Born in Melbourne to Lebanese parents, Malouf was renowned for pioneering modern Middle Eastern cuisine and his guest appearances on MasterChef.

Greg Malouf and Lucy Malouf at MoMo in 2010.Credit: Eddie Jim

He worked as the head chef at O’Connell’s restaurant in South Melbourne in the early 1990s and later helmed contemporary Middle Eastern restaurant MoMo.

His groundbreaking work earned him multiple chef hats from The Age Good Food Guide between 1991 and 2010.

Italian restaurateur Matteo Pignatelli told The Age he was still processing the news of the death of his friend and former colleague.

He said Malouf brought Middle Eastern cuisine to the forefront of modern fine dining in Australia and the world.

Greg Malouf.

“The string of young chefs who Greg mentored is his legacy,” he said. “He was so proud of them all.”

Greg Malouf - Figure 2
Photo The Sydney Morning Herald

Pignatelli said he and Malouf had shared many “experiences, mischiefs and memories”.

“I’m going to miss our bromance and our banter,” he said.

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Malouf wrote multiple cookbooks alongside his writing partner and ex-wife Lucy Malouf, including SUQAR: Desserts & Sweets from the Modern Middle East.

The critically acclaimed book won the 2019 James Beard Foundation Award for Baking and Desserts.

Lebanese chef Joseph Abboud, who owns Brunswick East’s Rumi restaurant, said Malouf’s books were a source of “much inspiration”.

“Greg’s expression of Middle Eastern food gave many of us the confidence to explore the cuisine of our heritage,” he said.

Malouf had triple-bypass surgery in 1981, aged just 21.

Eight years later came his first heart transplant – only the 17th performed at Melbourne’s Alfred Hospital, which required 40 days in hospital in isolation.

His second heart transplant, in 2003, required a 10-day hospital stay.

In a 2007 interview with the Sydney Morning Herald, Malouf said he did not treat his work as work, and said it was a lifestyle.

“For me cooking is like having a conversation or kicking the footy in the backyard. I don’t have to think about it.”

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