Chef Kiran Narayanan on the line at Moglu.

From AI Entrepreneur to Plant-Forward Restaurateur, Meet ICE Alum Kiran Narayanan

Chef and owner of Bangalore鈥檚 , this Plant-Based 国产福利 Arts graduate is committed to bringing his passion for micro-cuisines and local, vegetarian dining to the masses.

With the sale of his AI manufacturing company, Unit X, Chef Kiran Narayanan found himself with the opportunity to launch an entirely new career.

He knew he wanted to focus on bettering the planet, but didn't know where to begin. Though Chef Kiran was unsure, his wife Ankita steered him in the obvious direction.

As Chef Kiran retells it, Ankita pointed out how all of the media he watched and read centered around one thing: food. He was quick to realize that a culinary career was the answer he had been searching for.

Chef Kiran has always known a deep love for food and flavor. As a boy in India, he loved to roast garden vegetables in the residual heat of his mother鈥檚 coal-fired oven. Every time the family moved 鈥 which was frequently due to his father鈥檚 job 鈥 Chef Kiran鈥檚 first order of business was befriending the local "aunties" so he could learn everything he could about how to prepare their local cuisines.

鈥淭here are so many different kinds of sauces and local vegetables that they would prepare, so that's where I started picking things up 鈥 I would learn from them,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o by the time I was in high school, my knowledge of Indian cooking was solid.鈥

This habit of learning from his matriarchs is something Chef Kiran is carrying through life. An avid traveler, one of his fondest travel memories is traipsing to rural Italy to learn how to make pasta from the grandmother of someone he met in Rome the night before.

鈥淗e was bragging about his grandmother's pasta and I was like, 鈥業 need to learn how to do that, and I need to go see her do it,鈥" Chef Kiran says. "It's amazing what happens when you just ask鈥nd that's how I learned how to make pasta and marinara sauce.鈥

As Chef Kiran started focusing on his professional life, his curiosity about food,  hospitality and health 鈥 both for himself and the planet 鈥 steered his direction. He found himself hosting large backyard parties and learning as much information about chefs, food and recipes as he could.

It was the combination of these curiosities that ultimately led him to ICE鈥檚 Plant-Based 国产福利 Arts program.

Chef Kiran with his cohort at ICE New York.

Chef Kiran planned a month in New York City to try out eateries and visit culinary schools, including ICE, all in an effort to start building a basis for the hospitality group he hoped to open in Bangalore.

The strategy was simple: find the best plant-forward culinary program to get vegetarian cooking experience and then open a fully-vegetarian fine dining restaurant. If the venture succeeded, it would allow him to expand into casual dining and quick-service establishments, and eventually shift the way people eat at home.

鈥淥nce that happens, then I can actually achieve my vision of changing the way people eat 鈥 making it more vegetarian, or veg-centric,鈥 Chef Kiran says.

Chef Kiran was drawn to how efficient and focused ICE's Health Supportive (now Plant-Based) 国产福利 Arts program was.

鈥淚f you read enough about the program [you realize] it鈥檚 the most advanced plant-forward program there is," Chef Kiran says. "Also, the location was pretty much in the heart of Manhattan, which gave me the opportunity to work in places nearby.鈥

As a student, Chef Kiran was an avid volunteer at the ICE New York Campus' hydroponic farm, and within weeks of starting school found himself working the line at Amanda Cohen鈥檚 one-Michelin-starred vegetarian restaurant, Dirt Candy. Initially connected to the restaurant through his Chef-Instructor at ICE, he credits that experience as a transformative moment of working in the hospitality industry.

鈥淚t was my first day in a professional kitchen and they decided to put me on the pass for dinner service,鈥 Chef Kiran says. 鈥淚 thought 鈥業s this really happening?鈥欌 

Chef Kiran didn鈥檛 have the luxury of second-guessing himself for long, as Dirt Candy鈥檚 open kitchen meant he was face-to-face with actual customers.

鈥淚 looked at the tweezers in my hand and realized my hand was shaking,鈥 he says. 鈥淎t that moment these two women sat down right in front of me and I was like 鈥榊ou know what, I need to take three deep breaths and really look like I know what I鈥檓 doing.鈥 Then a few minutes later I heard one of them say, 鈥楾hat guy looks like he knows what he鈥檚 doing.鈥 This was at the time when we were still wearing masks, so I don鈥檛 know if they saw me smiling behind my mask but I was.鈥

Between the confidence gained from working on the line in front of customers and the excitement of being at Dirt Candy when they were awarded their first-ever Michelin Star, Chef Kiran was hooked on the thrill of working in fine dining. It was this experience that he took with him when he moved back to India to launch Mamacoco Hospitality.

As Chef Kiran got ready to launch his fine dining endeavor, there were some key factors he knew he needed to focus on. One was the holistic approach to running a restaurant he garnered from his time at ICE.

鈥淭he biggest lesson I learned was that it鈥檚 not just about getting the skill to cook, it's also about the soft skills of working with people," he says. "If you want to set up your own business, trust matters a lot, so you need to have a helping mentality.鈥

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

When it came to help, Chef Kiran also knew he couldn鈥檛 go into the endeavor alone, so he turned to his most valued teammate: his wife.

鈥淣o story of mine is complete without her鈥e've always worked and lived together,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o this wouldn't have been realized without her in it.鈥

Even the name of the restaurant, Moglu, and the restaurant group, Mamacoco Hospitality, are homages to the couple.

鈥淢amacoco is what I call her. And Moglu is what she calls me,鈥 he says.

While Chef Kiran holds the role of Owner, Executive Chef and Creative Director, his wife Ankita is the Managing Director of the group.

Moglu opened in Bangalore in 2024 to rave reviews, including a write-up in YS Life, which called the restaurant a 鈥渃elebration of vegetarianism.鈥 This description aligns with Chef Kiran鈥檚 own explanation of his vision, too. 

鈥淲e take [Indian] micro cuisine, which has amazing vegetarian food, and very deep flavors, usually even Sattvic food, and we showcase it," he says. "[After Moglu] we did a quick service menu format to sort of introduce it to the public all over India.鈥

The quick-service option is the second brand within Mamacoco Hospitality: Matka Junction.

With these successes under his belt, Chef Kiran is continuing to expand, with two more Bangalore locations of Matka Junction set to open this year, and a plan to take the brand 鈥減an-India鈥 in short order. This success is the culmination of his years of hard work and a clear vision for the future.

鈥淚 wanted to be a chef and start a restaurant group because I wanted to emphasize veg-forward eating," he says. "And I couldn鈥檛 have done it without the training I received from the experts at ICE.鈥

More Alumni Stories

Tags:

Add new comment