Skip to content
Search
Subscribe to our newsletter
Cuisine Noir logo
Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Cuisine Noir logo
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Cuisine Noir logo
  • Food & Drink
  • Climate + Food
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Cooking
  • Culture
  • News
    • Food News
    • Drink News
    • Travel News
  • Recipes
Donate
Donate
Donate Monthly
Donate Monthly
Black Chefs Food & Drink

Love for Community Inspires Rashad Armstead’s Chopped Victory

By Phyllis Armstrong
/
July 29, 2019
147      
147
Shares
Portrait Chef Rashad Armstead
Pictured: Rashad Armstead | Photo credit: Food Network
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

From the moment the chef and owner of Crave BBQ and Grammie’s Down-Home Chicken & Seafood stepped in front of the cameras on Food Network’s “Chopped,” he had a mission. Rashad Armstead wanted his story to inspire young people back in his Oakland, California community.

“The environment I grew up in was really, really rough,” Armstead said in his introduction. “It was easier to go and find drugs than it was to find a job.”

The 31-year-old chef used his interest in cooking to stay out of jail and away from trouble. He arrived at the “Chopped” competition with the confidence of a champion. “Winning ‘Chopped’ is my destiny. I’m ready to show the world what I’m made of.”

Armstead demonstrated skill, creativity and heart with his preparation of mystery basket ingredients. He told the judges why beating his three competitors would mean so much to him.

“Me winning ‘Chopped’ is going to show all the girls and boys that are coming from the neighborhoods where I’m coming from that you can make it,” Armstead said.

From Struggle to Victory

Relatives, friends and Oakland residents who watched “Take the Cake” on July 23 saw the chef’s emotional victory. With his head bowed and tears falling from his eyes as his third-round competitor Juan Rodriguez was chopped, Armstead realized his $10,000 prize validated his long struggle to be a successful chef. “This win is going to show my community that you can be a little boy coming from nothing and you can turn your life into something,” he said.

Oakland Chef Rashad Armstead of Crave BBQ and Grammies
Pictured/Photo credit: Rashad Armstead

The judges put a big smile on Armstead’s face when they praised his cooking. Although they found a few faults with his dishes, he impressed them with his flavors and originality.

Chef and restaurateur Geoffry Zakarian tasted the banana ketchup Armstead made to go with a fried soft shell crab and said, “This sauce is one of the best things I’ve ever tasted. It’s that good. I indeed learned something.”

Executive chef Alex Guarnaschelli called the entrée dish brilliant. The “Chopped” judges joined other food critics who began to take notice of Armstead after he launched Crave BBQ pop-up dinners in the Oakland area.

He used the inspiration and culinary skills learned from his mother and other talented family cooks with Southern roots to open Grammie’s in June.

The quick-service takeout eatery at 3817 Market Street in Oakland is named after his great-grandmother Sarah Rawls, an accomplished Bay area restaurateur and TV chef in the 1970s through the 1990s.

 

 

RELATED: STRONG CHEF: Exploring the Contemporary Black Chef David Thomas

Rashad Armstead Completes His Mission

Armstead’s great-grandmother would be proud of his performance on “Chopped “and the dessert that wowed the judges. His fried rice pudding with strawberry-raspberry sauce and whipped cream sealed his victory. “I don’t think I’ve ever had deep-fried rice pudding,” said chef and restaurateur Marcus Samuelsson.

“I love how you folded in the Swedish Princess cake into it. This is delicious.” Judge Zakarian agreed. “It’s mesmerizing. I keep eating it.” Even the runner up that judges called an amazing chef was impressed. “It was a good fight. He deserved to win,” said Juan Rodriguez, chef and owner of Magdalena’s Catering Events in Fort Worth, Texas.

Armstead started his culinary journey working as a dishwasher in a hospital cafeteria at age 16. He completed a six-month culinary program a few years later. Now the restaurateur wants to gain more opportunities to provide jobs and uplift young people, as he stated in a June interview with BerkeleySide.com.

“I want to complete this mission, it’s that much more important to me. I’m standing on the backs of my ancestors, my aunts and uncles, my friends who are dead or in jail, those who are addicted to drugs, the kids in foster care, my grandmother. I’m fighting for them,” he said. “I’m not holding back anymore.”

Trending Stories

  • Homemade southern fried chicken with biscuits and mashed potatoes
    Culture10 Classic Dishes to Celebrate National Soul Food Month
  • Homesteading - Farmer or homesteader hands carrying food
    Climate + FoodCultivating Freedom Through Homesteading: Tips to Get Started and Reconnected
  • Celebrity chef and The Great Soul Food Cook-Off Champion Razia Sabour
    Black Chefs, Food & DrinkCelebrity Chef Razia Sabour Honors Soul Food’s History with Competition Win
  • Collard greens with pork
    CultureHow Soulful Collard Greens Are Rooted in Black Culture, Cooking and Farming

Subscribe

Subscribe to The Weekly Dish and get the week’s top food stories delivered to our inbox each Thursday.


    Diaspora Food Stories Podcast

    Listen to global chefs, winemakers, farmers and more tell their stories in their own words.
    Listen to the Podcast

    Support Award-Winning Journalism

    Help Cuisine Noir deliver stories that honor Black food history, culture and traditions.

    Donate
    Donate on Paypal

    Related Articles

    Loading...
    Haitan Restauratuer Kathia Joseph, co-owner of Casa Matilda Steakhouse
    Featured Food & Drink

    Haitian Restaurateur Kathia Joseph Sizzles with Success at Miami Steakhouse 

    Couple dining in the courtyard in New Orleans
    Food & Drink Travel

    25 Black-Owned Restaurants in New Orleans For Every Palate

    Alchy Cocktails founder Gregory Etienne
    Food & Drink

    Alchy Cocktails Founder Gregory Etienne Raises the Bar for Craft Cocktails

    Cuisine Noir is an award-winning lifestyle media outlet dedicated to providing culturally-rich and factually reported stories that connect the African diaspora through food, drink and travel and celebrate Black food cultures.

    Facebook Instagram Pinterest Youtube

    About

    Our History
    Our Team
    Content Integrity
    Advertise with Us
    Photography Use
    Affiliate Links
    Donate to Our Work
    Privacy

    Subscribe

    Subscribe to The Weekly Dish to have award-winning food journalism delivered to your inbox each Thursday.


      Copyright© 2025 Cuisine Noir and The Global Food and Drink Initiative.
      Site by ACS Digital