Monique Fiso / Hiakai — The Most Important NZ Food Figure
Wellington
Monique Fiso (Ngā Rauru, Ngāti Ruanui, Samoan descent) is to New Zealand what Alan Wong is to Hawaiʻi: the chef who proved indigenous cuisine could operate at the highest level of fine dining. Hiakai (Māori for “hungry”) in Wellington was named one of TIMEʻs 100 Greatest Places (2019), featured in Forbes, NYT, National Geographic, and on Netflixʻs The Final Table. Fiso trained at Martin Bosleyʻs in Wellington, then spent years in New Yorkʻs Michelin-starred kitchens (Brad Farmerieʻs Public, Missy Robbinsʻ A Voce, Matt Lambertʻs The Musket Room) before returning to Aotearoa in 2016 to reinvent Māori cuisine. Her pantry reads like a native bush inventory: horopito, kawakawa, pikopiko, mamaku (black tree fern), tī kōuka (cabbage tree) hearts, red matipo syrup, kiekie flower gin, karamū berry vinegar, manono bark ice cream. She wrote Hiakai: Modern Māori Cuisine (2020), which won the Ockham NZ Book Award and is considered the most important food book ever published in New Zealand. Hiakai has since closed (Wellingtonʻs hospitality crisis), making the documentation of her contribution to Provenance even more critical. Fisoʻs thesis: Māori cuisine is not rustic. It is sophisticated, deeply researched, and worthy of the worldʻs finest tables.