Soleil Ho

Soleil Ho (born 1988 (age 31)) is an American chef, food writer, podcaster, and restaurant critic. Formerly co-host of the podcast The Racist Sandwich, Ho became the food critic at the San Francisco Chronicle in 2019, replacing Michael Bauer. Ho left the position in 2023, becoming a part of the Chronicle's opinion desk. Ho was awarded the James Beard Award for criticism in 2022, and was nominated for the same in 2020 and 2023.

Life and career
Born into a Vietnamese-American family, Ho was raised in New York and graduated from Stuyvesant High School in 2005. Ho graduated from Grinnell College in 2009.

As a chef, Ho has worked at restaurants in New Orleans, Minneapolis, Portland, Oregon, and Puerto Vallarta, where their mother owned a restaurant.

In 2019, they replaced Michael Bauer, who retired after 32 years as the restaurant critic for the San Francisco Chronicle. Ho has joked that Bauer, their predecessor at the newspaper, held the job since they were "not even a fetus".

Literary works
Ho is careful about the connotations of the words they select. A specific example is that they do not use the term "kaffir lime" because kaffir is a racial slur in South Africa. More generally, they do not think that "ethnic" food is a legitimate concept. Ho says "The imprecision of the word—and the assumption that it doesn’t apply equally to people and cuisines associated with Europe or white America—gives me such a headache." They consider terms like "sustainable," "responsibly grown" and "farm-to-table" to be marketing buzzwords that are too often abused.

Ho mentions poet and essayist Hanif Abdurraqib, food critic Ruth Reichl and newspaper critic-at-large Wesley Morris as among their influences. Ho says that they want to write about restaurants that "tell a story" which may focus on "race, gender, class or the culture of the Bay Area".

They co-authored Meal with Blue Delliquanti. The book is described as a "graphic novel on culinary mentorship, queer romance, and eating insects".

Concerned about their legacy in a high-profile position, Ho commented, "What if I screw up and no one ever hires a queer woman of color for a role like this again?"