SAN FRANCISCO – Bill Granger, the Australian chef, food writer and restaurant owner who brought Aussie-style food to international capitals from London to Seoul, has died. He was 54.

Granger’s family said on social media Tuesday that the chef died in a hospital in London on Christmas Day.

“A dedicated husband and father, Bill died peacefully in hospital with his wife Natalie Elliott and three daughters, Edie, Ins and Bunny, at his bedside in their adopted home of London,” the family statement said. It gave no further details.

Born in 1969 in Melbourne, Australia, Granger was a self-taught cook who launched a chef’s career over three decades after dropping out of art school. He opened his first restaurant in 1993 in the Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst, where he soon became known for his breakfasts served at a central communal table.

  • @[email protected]
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    221 year ago

    The story doesn’t really work out? I mean if he started his first restaurant at 24 how could he have launched his chef career 3 decades after dropping out of art school?

    Further if art school is supposed to be college level he barely even stayed alive long enough to live three decades post dropping out…

    • @Stamau123OP
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      371 year ago

      I thinks it’s bad punctuation or grammar

      He launched his three decade chef career after dropping out of Art school

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        That makes sense. But that is a really piss poor sentence.

        Especially since it’s literally “Who launched a chef’s career over three decades after dropping out of art school”

        That s on decades and “over” kills any ambiguity, but a comma after decades would make it passable, a semi colon and changing to “; after he dropped out of art school” would make it crystal clear.

        • @trolololol
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          21 year ago

          AI can’t do grammar like in the old days

          Pepperidge farm remembers