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Joseph “J.J.” Johnson ’07

Cookbook Author/Executive Chef/Restaurateur

“I wouldn’t be where I am without CIA. The chefs and professors there got me ready for the culinary world and set me up for success.”

Keeping Culinary Traditions Alive

Chef Joseph “J.J.” Johnson is in good company. As one of Forbes magazine’s “30 Under 30” honorees, he joins such luminaries as actress Olivia Wilde, singer Bruno Mars, basketball star Kevin Durant, and CNBC anchor Kelly Evans. It’s a fantastic achievement for this up-and-coming chef, who made the Food & Wine category of Forbes’ tally of the brightest stars under the age of 30 in 15 different fields.

In July 2019, J.J. opened FieldTrip in Harlem, a fast-casual restaurant focusing on grains. “Rice is the greatest connector,” J.J. says. “The idea is to focus on grains and rice from around the world, including Jefferson red rice, blue barley berries, Carolina gold rice, Tribune Chinese black rice, aged basmati rice, Italian pilgrim rice, and glaberrima rice, cooked in an Afro-Asian style. It will be an affordable restaurant that people in the neighborhood can eat at every day.” Since 2019, Chef J.J. has opened four locations throughout New York City.

He is the author of Between Harlem and Heaven: Afro-Asian Cooking for Big Nights, Weeknights, and Every Day, co-written with Alexander Smalls, which won the 2019 James Beard Foundation Book Award in the American category. As well as The Simple Art of Rice: Recipes from Around the World for the Heart of Your Table—one of The New York Times Best Cookbooks of 2023. But with all his success and recognition, J.J. never forgets where he came from.

The first indication that he had a passion for food came when he was just seven years old, after seeing a commercial for the Culinary Institute of America. “I told my mom I wanted to be a chef,” J.J. recalls. “She said ‘You should be a doctor or a politician. Why would you want to be a chef?’” But he was hooked after watching his Puerto Rican grandmother serve up butternut squash soup and other ethnic dishes.

His life as a chef got off to a bit of a rough start, though. When J.J. began his studies at CIA, he admits that he was the worst cook in the kitchen—but one day “it all clicked.” Indeed it did. He graduated and went on to work at several notable New York City restaurants, including Tropica, Jane, Tribeca Grill, and Centro Vinoteca. Along the way, J.J. was the winner of the Bravo show Rocco’s Dinner Party, hosted and judged by CIA graduate Rocco DiSpirito ’86. Shortly thereafter J.J. was approached via email by chef/restaurateur/opera singer Alexander Smalls, who befriended the young chef and eventually gave him the opportunity of a lifetime: to be the executive chef at The Cecil, when it opened 2013. In 2016, The Cecil merged with Smalls’ Harlem jazz supper club Minton’s where J.J. served as executive chef before his departure.

J.J. is quick to point out the impact his alma mater has had on his career. “I wouldn’t be where I am without CIA,” J.J. says. “The chefs and professors there got me ready for the culinary world and set me up for success. The college has a saying: ‘Preparation is Everything.’ That’s how I look at my life every day.” And he couldn’t be happier with that life.