Special women’s day
Chef Pam Pichaya Soontornyanakij’s story is shaped by a rare blend of cultures and quiet determination. Raised in a Thai-Chinese household with strong Western influences, her understanding of food was never limited to one tradition. Meals at home were a natural mix of spaghetti and rice, wok-fried noodles alongside grilled meats. This openness has taught her to see the kitchen not as ‘fusion’ but as coexistence – where diversity is not forced but welcomed. Her Thai-Chinese roots gave her a deep respect for balance, layers and meaning in food, while Western influences gave her variety and ease. Together, they shaped both her cooking and her worldview: grounded in heritage, yet expansive in spirit.
Food, for Chef Pam, was never just sustenance — it was identity. From early childhood, the kitchen was where family life unfolded. Cooking alongside her mother was not a hobby but a way of growing up. It was how love was shown, how they were celebrated, and how they were comforted in difficult times. Whether preparing a wok of pasta or a humble bowl of noodles, meals carried emotion and intention. This institution still defines its work today: taste first, connection always.
Her professional training refines this instinct. Educated at The Culinary Institute of America and shaped by her experience at Jean-Georges in New York, Chef Pam learned discipline, structure and precision at the highest level. Fine dining taught her to see food as both an art and a science. However, even in these elite kitchens, it never left the soul of Thai cuisine – the bold contrasts, multi-layered complexity and emotional depth. Instead of abandoning tradition, he learned how to elevate it with technique, creating food that is both authentic and refined.

Entering professional kitchens, he saw the environment in a different light. With a lifelong love of sports, Chef Pam saw kitchens as places of teamwork and energy, not battlefields. The pressure energized her. The competition motivated her. While she recognizes the challenges facing women in the industry, she has chosen to focus on growth rather than limitation, treating each service as an opportunity to hone her craft and leadership from within.
Leadership, he believes, is forged in the heat. The kitchen taught Chef Pam that power is built through action, not titles. True leadership means showing up in tough times, staying calm in the chaos, and treating every team member with fairness and respect. Like a heartbeat, a kitchen only works when everyone moves together—and that harmony depends on trust and care as much as skill.
Her historic recognition as the World’s Best Female Chef in 2025 marked a powerful moment not only for her, but for Thai and Asian women worldwide. Personally, it was filled with gratitude—for her family, her team, and the years of behind-the-scenes work. Professionally, it was a moment of cultural validation. Thai cuisine, long loved, was now globally recognized at the highest level. However, Chef Pam hopes the award serves a larger purpose: to inspire female chefs everywhere to believe that their voices, flavors and stories belong on the world stage.

For young women dreaming of professional kitchens, Chef Pam’s message is firm but gentle: dream big, but build a solid foundation. Master the basics. Stay disciplined. Trends fade, but technique endures. He believes that curiosity, humility and consistency are more important than speed, and that success is shaped by effort, not shortcuts. Most importantly, she urges women not to reshape themselves to fit expectations—but to chart their own paths.
International Women’s Day has a deep meaning for chef Pam Pichaya Soontornyanakij. It is not only a celebration, but a reminder of responsibility. Raised by women who led through action rather than statement, she learned that strength is often quiet and invisible. This day, for her, is about bringing these unseen stories to light – honoring women who have worked unrecognized and opening doors for those still waiting to enter. She carries these legacies forward, determined to make room for future generations.
Her biggest inspiration remains her mother – the first chef she ever met. Cooking alongside her since childhood, Chef Pam has learned that food is not just about technique but about emotion, intention and non-verbal communication. Beyond the kitchen, she admires women who lead with poise under pressure and those who have carved out their own space in male-dominated worlds while making room for others. Their resilience continues to shape its purpose.

She believes the food industry needs to evolve in the way it supports women – not through token gestures, but through real systems of guidance, safety and opportunity. Growth must be supported from kitchen floors to leadership tables. Narratives must also change, recognizing that leadership does not have one shape or style. When women’s voices are allowed to rise fully, the industry becomes richer and more sustainable.
If Chef Pam’s cooking style could be summed up in three words, it would be bold, rooted and evolving – bold in flavor and expression, rooted in Thai and Thai-Chinese heritage and evolving through constant learning.
And for women walking unconventional paths, chef Pam Pichaya Soontornyanakij’s message is simple yet profound: learn deeply, stay grounded, and persevere. True strength is built step by step. There is no shortcut to mastery. Success doesn’t always come suddenly – it often develops quietly, shaped by discipline, values and time. In kitchens and beyond, she proves that when women build their futures with intention, they do more than succeed—they redefine what leadership looks like.
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