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November/December 2025 – The Entrepreneur of the Year Awards

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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W O R K / L I F E | THE PIVOT VA N C O U V E R - B AS E D Tarek Chellouf says there are moments in the series The Bear that feel ripped straight from his life. Take episode seven, where the printer keeps spitting out tickets after a sandwich spe- cial overwhelms the kitchen and Carmy, the head chef, loses his mind. "I had that exact situation happen," Chellouf recalls— except it wasn't sandwich-order tickets, it was breakfast vouchers for a ton of guests that arrived on a cruise ship. The front- of-house manager—"who was not good at his job," says Chellouf—forgot to warn the kitchen they were coming. It was just one example of what he calls a rampant lack of leadership—and the kind of chaos that, over time, wore him down. But for all the intensity, Chellouf hadn't set out to be a chef at all—he stumbled into cooking by accident. As an 18-year-old with a younger brother to support and rent to pay, Chellouf found an unexpected lifeline in the kitchen. What began as a means to an end soon ignited a surprising love for the fast-paced, high-skill world of the culinary arts—and kicked off a career that now spans two decades. Chellouf cut his teeth in hotel and restau- rant kitchens, working every station in sight. Seven years in, he doubled down, enrolling in culinary school to sharpen his techni- cal chops. From there, he jumped into the high-volume world of banquets—cranking out meals for up to 500 guests on weekends. The grind paid off: he climbed to sous chef at the Marriott in downtown Vancouver. And, somewhere in the chaos, he even checked off a career dream, spending five years teaching both future chefs and passionate home cooks. Yet beneath the hustle and passion, Chel- louf came to see a hard truth: the culinary world often chews up its workers. Low pay, relentless hours and poor leadership take their toll on many employees. "Just because someone is a savant at cooking doesn't mean they'll be good at teaching people how to cook," the 38-year-old says. In his view, fragile egos at the top create a toxic culture that quickly wears people down and drives them to burnout. 76 | BC B U S I N E SS NOVEM B ER/ D ECEM B ER 2025 By the time COVID shuttered his hotel's kitchen, Chellouf was at a crossroads—ready to pivot but unsure where to turn. Talking with some childhood friends who were elec- tricians, Chellouf was struck by the unex- pected parallels between their trade and his own. Both demanded hands-on skill, mental agility and constant problem-solving. What ultimately drew the former chef to the trade was its precision—clear rules, strict codes and high standards. In December, I was teaching people how to make fine dining cuisine and how to properly sear the perfect steak. Now, I'm an absolute beginner learning a new skill from square one." Mark Yuen

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