Ever wonder what makes world-class chefs scrunch their noses and push plates away? Despite their sophisticated palates and culinary mastery, even the kitchen elite have foods they absolutely despise.
These cooking legends prove that food preferences remain deeply personal—no matter how many Michelin stars you’ve earned.
1. Gordon Ramsay Hates Pineapple Pizza

The hot-tempered British chef doesn’t mince words about this controversial topping. “Pineapple does not go on top of pizza,” he once declared on The Nightly Show, nearly causing an international incident.
Ramsay’s hatred runs so deep that he once jokingly threatened to shut down a restaurant over their Hawaiian pizza offering.
2. Anthony Bourdain Loathed Airplane Food

“No one has ever felt better after eating airplane food,” Bourdain famously quipped. The late chef and world traveler advised passengers to never eat the reheated meals served at 30,000 feet.
Instead, he suggested fasting or bringing your own provisions. Bourdain’s particular disgust stemmed from food sitting in warming trays for hours.
3. Jamie Oliver Banned Chicken Nuggets

Crusader for healthy eating Jamie Oliver won’t touch processed chicken nuggets with a ten-foot pole. After famously demonstrating their production on his show using chicken scraps and skin, he banned them from his household.
The British chef’s revulsion comes from seeing firsthand what goes into these cafeteria staples. .
4. Ina Garten Can’t Stand Cilantro

The Barefoot Contessa joins the genetic cilantro-haters club! Garten possesses the OR6A2 gene that makes this herb taste like soap—a genuine biological aversion shared by about 14% of people.
Her Mediterranean-inspired recipes deliberately avoid this polarizing ingredient.
5. Martha Stewart Refuses Truffle Oil

America’s homemaking queen has zero patience for this chef-favorite ingredient. “Truffle oil is one of the few ingredients that doesn’t belong in anyone’s kitchen,” Stewart declared bluntly in a Food & Wine interview.
Her beef? Most commercial versions contain zero actual truffles—just synthetic compounds.
6. Alton Brown Despises Single-Use Kitchen Gadgets

Technically not a food, but Brown’s hatred for unitaskers runs deep enough to warrant inclusion. The Food Network star refuses anything associated with avocado slicers, egg separators, or—heaven forbid—garlic presses.
“The only unitasker allowed in my kitchen is a fire extinguisher,” Brown famously quipped.
7. Guy Fieri Won’t Touch Eggs

The Mayor of Flavortown has a surprising kryptonite—eggs! Despite touring America’s greasiest spoons, Fieri avoids this breakfast staple completely.
“That’s a deal-breaker,” he told People magazine about finding eggs in his food. The spiky-haired chef developed this aversion as a child and never outgrew it.
8. Nigella Lawson Avoids Microwaved Food

The British domestic goddess caused a stir when she admitted having no microwave in her kitchen. “I don’t like food that has its molecules shaken up that way,” Lawson explained during a BBC interview.
While her reasoning might lack scientific backing, her commitment to traditional cooking methods remains unshakable.
9. Bobby Flay Can’t Handle Green Bell Peppers

The Iron Chef’s kryptonite? The humble green bell pepper. “They repeat on me and I can’t stand the flavor,” Flay confessed on Food Network’s Hot Ones interview.
What makes this aversion particularly interesting is Flay’s southwestern cooking style, which traditionally incorporates peppers of all kinds.
10. David Chang Hates Fancy Room Service

The Momofuku founder and Netflix star has a peculiar hotel habit—refusing elaborate room service meals. “Room service is terrible 99.9% of the time,” Chang declared on his podcast.
His reasoning? Upscale dishes deteriorate during the journey from kitchen to room.
11. Giada De Laurentiis Skips Coconut

The Italian-American chef and Food Network star admits coconut makes her skin crawl. “The texture, the flavor—I can’t handle it in any form,” De Laurentiis revealed during a cooking demonstration.
When required for filming, she’ll prepare coconut dishes but refuses to taste them.
12. Wolfgang Puck Rejects Processed Cheese

The Austrian-American culinary icon who revolutionized California cuisine has one firm rule: no processed cheese products ever cross his lips. “It’s not real food,” Puck stated.
His restaurants exclusively use artisanal cheeses with pronounceable ingredients.
13. Rachael Ray Avoids Certain Seafood

The perky TV personality and cookbook author harbors a specific seafood aversion—she can’t stomach octopus or squid. “Too rubbery, too tentacle-y,” Ray explained on her daytime show.
What makes this particularly interesting is that Ray doesn’t consider herself picky otherwise. She’ll try almost anything once but draws her line firmly at cephalopods.
14. Thomas Keller Bans Sriracha

The French Laundry’s perfectionist chef has banned the trendy hot sauce from all his kitchens. “It overpowers everything it touches,” Keller explained in an interview with Food & Wine magazine.
His culinary philosophy emphasizes subtle flavor enhancement rather than domination. Keller believes proper seasoning should complement ingredients, not mask them.
15. Emeril Lagasse Dislikes Store-Bought Mayonnaise

BAM! The energetic New Orleans chef refuses to use commercial mayonnaise in his cooking or on his plate.
“That jarred stuff isn’t real food—it’s chemicals pretending to be food,” Lagasse once declared during a cooking demonstration. He insists on making mayo from scratch.
16. Marcus Samuelsson Rejects Factory-Farmed Chicken

The Ethiopian-Swedish chef behind Red Rooster Harlem won’t touch industrially raised poultry. “Once you’ve had properly raised chicken, the factory stuff tastes like sad, wet cardboard,” Samuelsson told Food & Wine magazine.
Growing up in Sweden, he experienced quality poultry with actual flavor.
17. Padma Lakshmi Can’t Stand Pancakes

The Top Chef host and culinary author has a surprising breakfast aversion—pancakes! “Too bread-y, too sweet, too much like eating a sponge,” Lakshmi explained on Watch What Happens Live.
Despite judging countless culinary creations on television, this simple breakfast staple remains her nemesis.
18. José Andrés Refuses Farmed Salmon

The Spanish-American chef and humanitarian has strong opinions about aquaculture. “Farmed salmon is an environmental disaster and tastes nothing like the wild fish,” Andrés stated firmly.
His restaurants exclusively serve wild-caught varieties. Andrés believes industrial salmon farming damages oceans while producing inferior products.
19. Alice Waters Boycotts Out-of-Season Produce

The Chez Panisse founder and farm-to-table pioneer refuses winter strawberries and other out-of-season produce. “Eating seasonally connects us to nature’s rhythms,” Waters explained in her cookbook ‘The Art of Simple Food.’
Her revolutionary Berkeley restaurant changes menus daily based on local availability.