Culture For People With Autism, Can Restaurant Kitchens Be a Haven? - Culinary jobs have the potential to be a perfect fit, and a new effort is afoot to help autistic workers land them.

1775922007146.png
Joseph Valentino, left, a cook at Point Seven in Manhattan, and Franklin Becker, the restaurant’s owner. Mr. Valentino, who has autism, helped inspire a new program to place people on the autism spectrum in fine-dining jobs.Credit...James Estrin/The New York Times
By Pete Wells
April 5, 2026
Leer en español
(Link) | (Archive)

For three Halloweens in a row, Joseph Valentino was Emeril Lagasse.

He wasn’t the only kid in New Jersey who idolized chefs and wanted to be one when he grew up. For Mr. Valentino, though, the dream seemed especially hard to reach. Diagnosed with autism as a toddler, he still hadn’t spoken by age 5, when he first dressed as Emeril.

Today, at 27, he is a cook at Point Seven restaurant in Manhattan, working the cold food, pastry and raw bar stations, sometimes all at once. He says the path he took to get there was strewn with rejection. There were interviews that went nowhere, jobs in kitchens where he never felt welcome, deep periods of depression.

“I viewed myself as a liability,” he said.

His career is one of the inspirations for a new program, Chefs on the Spectrum, meant to train and place people with autism in fine-dining jobs.

Mr. Valentino and the owner of Point Seven, the chef Franklin Becker, introduced the initiative Tuesday night during a $2,500-a-head fund-raiser for the nonprofit organization Autism Speaks at Cipriani Wall Street in Lower Manhattan.

Mr. Becker, who is on the group’s board, pitched his Chefs on the Spectrum idea to the rest of the board as a way to help address two problems at the same time: the shortage of skilled labor in restaurants and a high unemployment rate among autistic adults.

Professional kitchens have long been known as havens for people with neurological and developmental disabilities. Chefs who describe themselves as dyslexic include Marco Pierre White, Jamie Oliver and Marc Murphy. Cooks who say they have some form of attention deficit can seem to outnumber those without.

But people on the autism spectrum have an exceedingly low profile in the business, whether because they haven’t been diagnosed or choose not to disclose it.

“I still haven’t met anybody with autism in the kitchen,” said Mr. Valentino, who cooked in cafeterias and catering kitchens before going to work for Mr. Becker last year. “I think that needs to be fixed, and I think this program will fix it.”

There are other initiatives that place people on the spectrum into hospitality jobs. Several coffee chains, including Bitty & Beau’s, which has 13 locations in the United States, are dedicated to employing people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

But the focus on fine dining makes Chefs on the Spectrum unusual. Mr. Becker, who has an adult son with autism, has recruited more than a dozen chefs from around the country, including Andrew Zimmern, Daniel Boulud, Chris Bianco, Maneet Chauhan and Michael and Bryan Voltaggio. Their restaurants will hire workers from the program after receiving training in how to help those new employees thrive.
1775922074281.png

All eight employees of Chitarra Pastaria, a pasta maker in Cambridge, Mass., are on the autism spectrum, including Stefano Micali, left, and Julia Agostino. Credit... David Degner for The New York Times

“There’s a preconception that there’s a risk in hiring autistic individuals,” Mr. Becker said. “The real risk is overlooking incredible talent.”

That talent can take several forms. Some cooks on the spectrum are meticulously organized at their stations. Some have an exceptional recall of recipes, and others are especially diligent about safety protocols, said Mark Fierro, who provides job-placement support and career coaching at TACT (Teaching the Autism Community Trades), a school for autistic adults in Englewood, Colo.

Some students in TACT’s culinary program perform with astonishing consistency. If a restaurant wants meat butchered into a certain cut, Mr. Fierro said, “they’re going to make them exactly the same way every single time.”

A common hallmark of autism is a cultivation of special interests, intense and passionate devotions to particular topics. For cooks on the spectrum, this can mean a penchant for intellectual spelunking into, say, the molecular structure of hydrocolloids, or the behavior of the molds that produce blue cheese and miso.

“Researching an ingredient, breaking down where it comes from, how to use it, the cultural context — all of that is a special interest,” said a chef in New York City on the autism spectrum who asked not to be identified because she fears that neurodivergence can be misunderstood. “My brain is never satisfied for information. It always craves more.”

Her proclivity for amassing and organizing data made her a “load-bearing pillar” of any kitchen where she worked, she said. It also sets her up to make unexpected associations that can lead to creative leaps.

“The needle for ingenuity gets pushed forward by people who don’t think the same way neurotypical people think,” she said.

Advocates for greater acceptance of autism in the kitchen say that working side by side can benefit people on and off the spectrum. At Chitarra Pastaria, a small pasta company in Cambridge, Mass., whose eight employees all have autism, tailoring jobs for each worker’s talents has been a valuable experience, said one of the founders, the chef Ken Oringer.

1775922183466.png

Ezra Kukis works a pasta extruder at Chitarra Pastaria, which tailors jobs to each employee’s skills. Credit... David Degner for The New York Times
“You get to be able to appreciate people for their skill sets,” he said. “It really teaches you to have these relationships with people and learn what makes them tick and how they can be effective.” (Mr. Oringer has been recruited by Mr. Becker to join Chefs on the Spectrum’s pilot program.)

For some people on the spectrum, kitchens are places where they can put their aptitudes to good use without being held back by the challenges that social interactions often pose.

To help autistic people navigate the work, restaurants may have to make minor adjustments. One easy accommodation, said Keith Wargo, the chief executive of Autism Speaks, is to avoid face-to-face job interviews, which demand a complex set of communication skills, in favor of tryouts. Another is to swap LED bulbs for fluorescent fixtures, which flicker and buzz in ways that some people on the spectrum find stressful.

Some accommodations can have wider benefits. Mr. Fierro said he has advised employers to provide cooking timers to help TACT students with multitasking, a minor step that he said also helps neurotypical workers.

Steps, a company that runs job-training centers in Bangkok for neurodivergent adults, as well as cafes and a bakery that employ graduates, consulted with one large hotel group and advised it to place maps, labels and other signs in its kitchens there. The signs were meant to help workers who had memory or attention issues, but they proved popular with almost everybody.

“It helped onboard all new employees more quickly, it helped people work more efficiently during large events, and it increased employees’ sense of belonging,” said Courtney Konyn, the group’s communications director.

Chefs on the Spectrum is still taking shape, but it is likely that some of its training will be based on Mr. Valentino’s experience of navigating professional kitchens. He will try to answer questions about how they can work with people with autism. And he hopes that his career will help change views of autism.

“One day, I do want to become an executive chef,” Mr. Valentino said. “I want to be that one person that has autism and made it to the top of the brigade system.” Mr. Becker, he said, believes he has the qualities to make it happen.

“I have the passion and determination,” Mr. Valentino said. “And I don’t like being late to work.”

Follow New York Times Cooking on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, TikTok and Pinterest. Get regular updates from New York Times Cooking, with recipe suggestions, cooking tips and shopping advice.
Pete Wells is a reporter covering food. He was previously The Times’s restaurant critic from 2012 until 2024 and, before that, the editor of the Food section.
A version of this article appears in print on April 8, 2026, Section D, Page 2 of the New York edition with the headline: A Haven for People With Autism. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
 
I really dislike this idea that autismos are really, really extra good at things. They're not. There's a reason they never leave home or are put in homes or require tard wranglers.
 
Are we forgetting the orange Fanta? Are we forgetting the dirty crapped briefs? 🩲

You really want ChrisChan making your food?
Good one, you beat me to the Orange Navy Fanta special.

Powerlevel: An old uncle who was crazy interested about ufos went all the way to Roswell around 2000.

The fast food joint near his hotel had employed drooling tards to waah the dishes, with the logically predicted consequence. He came back much slimmer.

Just watch any old 4chsn tardtales to know how bad an idea this is.
 
They’re stressful, they’re loud, a vast majority operate on less clear cut procedure and more tribal knowledge you are expected to just pick up without being explicitly told. I don’t know how autists handle drugs like meth or coke so that may also be a negative impact.
There are some autists that handle meth or coke just fine xd
An extemely high stimulus job that values speed over accuracy? Honestly sounds like the worst job for an autist possible.
Yup it's actually simple and it's already been mentioned. There are like daycares for autists where you can leave your adult autistic son and he'll play lego all day or whatever while being watched by a therapists who probably knows nothing. So then there is an owner restaurant and he sees working age men, that are mostly white, have citizenship (won't be expelled by ICE), have less affinity for drugs and you can pay them less than minimal wage. Perfection. You just need to manipulate some people and you have new employees.

They don't think that those autists are unemployed for a reason and they are often physically way weaker, so if you employ a 6 foot male autist you have to remember he will very likely have strength of a 5'2'' woman. And a 5'2'' woman would have a strength of a child.
I've worked with people with Downs in a kitchen. A fast food kitchen. It worked well, so long as we didn't get them out of their comfort zone. One girl really wanted to learn grill, so one time, when we were slow, I taught her, a bit. As soon as we got three tickets, she freaked out, slightly. It was totally fine. I told her she did a great job, and I really needed her help back on fries, again. She did so, and a meltdown was avoided. But I later got a write up for "fostering a hostile work environment." Not because she complained. Because her overprotective mother did.
Thank you for sharing, you'd been either way tbh
Downies have kinda different struggles. Like your mate asked to do the grill and then she understood when she was sent back, an autist with a slightly higher IQ would probably be unable to ask you to teach him. An autist would also have significant sensory problems. An autist just like a downie would be unable to solve problems if any arose even very simple problems like idk machine got jammed or something.
 
I really dislike this idea that autismos are really, really extra good at things. They're not. There's a reason they never leave home or are put in homes or require tard wranglers.
Thank fuck you've said what I've been saying for years. I'm an autist (diagnosed, I self-hate a shitload, but that's another story) and I'm barely fucking good at anything. The few that are good at one thing are usually into some skill that's jack all applicable to anywhere.

An all-autistic kitchen would be a living HELL.
 
I mean cooking and the necessary communication involved should be relatively objective and algorithmic, which is suitable to high-functioning autism. The working environment would be the bigger concern, something loud and disorganized like you see on Hell's Kitchen obviously wouldn't be suitable
 
I really dislike this idea that autismos are really, really extra good at things. They're not. There's a reason they never leave home or are put in homes or require tard wranglers.
There are idiot savants or genius-level aspies, but they're the exception, not the rule. And the aspies tend to prefer solitude and humble pursuits.
Like that one mathematician who when called by an awards panel or whatever you call it to reward him for his contributions to the field responded with something like "Thank you. Now if you'll excuse me, you interrupted me picking mushrooms" and hung up.
Thank fuck you've said what I've been saying for years. I'm an autist (diagnosed, I self-hate a shitload, but that's another story) and I'm barely fucking good at anything.
Skill issue. :smug:
 
I really dislike this idea that autismos are really, really extra good at things. They're not. There's a reason they never leave home or are put in homes or require tard wranglers.
They're generally not good programmers.
 
tbh I think the restaurant industry tries to pulls that on teenagers too.
Yeah they make McDonald's look like a promising career to anyone who isn't old enough to buy alcohol. And of course they promote the retard who can't even press the red button when the fryer beeps to district fucking manager before they even consider anyone halfway competent.
As a sperg who worked at a restaurant (not in the kitchen), fuck no.
Any kind of food service or dishwashing job is difficult enough without a bunch of spergs around.
Christ... normies think movie autism is real world autism don't they?

Look I understand the desire. If I could force feed an autistic person cocaine and Adderall to get a photo realistic painting that would sell for millions I would. Sadly they just shake a lot and scream.
I honestly can't stand how normies depict people with autism, they're either super geniuses or awkward drooling retards. Or hopeless incel losers, if we're going to go into the crappy UK dating shows.

I once spoke to someone who was convinced that "so many people with Ass Burgers are successful" but in reality most of them end up becoming NEETs or doing entry level jobs forever alongside downies and tards. Or they become terminally online and end up with a thread here.
 
Back
Top Bottom