Ranveer Brar is one of the most popular celebrity chefs in India today, known for his easy charm, cookbooks, and appearances on TV and at restaurants around the world. But his story didn’t begin with glamour or confidence. Before the cameras, the stage lights, and the global trips, he lived through a chapter that was raw, painful, and full of uncertainty that not many people know about. It was a phase that didn’t just change his career path—it reshaped how he sees failure, ambition, and even the meaning of a life well lived.Brar once shared a photo on Instagram with a simple but powerful quote attributed to Mae West: “You only live once, but if you do it right, once is enough.” On the surface, it sounds like a motivational line people pin on their walls. But for him, it carries the weight of lived experience. That quote isn’t just inspiration; it feels like a quiet reminder of the times he had to choose between giving up and getting back up. Today, he’s a television personality, an author, a restaurateur, and even an actor, but that calm, grounded perspective seems to have been forged in the years when everything around him seemed to fall apart.And in a recent conversation on Ranveer Allahbadia’s podcast, Brar opened up about one of the toughest periods of his life—the collapse of his restaurant in Boston. It wasn’t just a business going wrong; it was his entire world cracking open. A fallout with his business partners left him emotionally bruised and financially drained. At one point, he had only about 5,000 dollars to his name, and even that dwindled. By the age of 32, he was dealing with bankruptcy and homelessness, sleeping on benches and waking up with no clear plan for the next day. For someone who had seen success come relatively easily in his earlier ventures, this sudden drop felt less like a stumble and more like a free fall.What hurt even more than the money, though, was the loss of pride. Brar admitted that he struggled to ask for help, even when he desperately needed it. The very idea of reaching out felt like an admission of defeat. He had grown used to people seeing him as capable, driven, on the rise—so facing failure so publicly felt especially humiliating. Still, in that mess, he slowly began to shift his mindset. He realised that survival wasn’t as distant as it seemed. Even if all he had was nothing, he could still start small—maybe with something as simple as a food cart, or cooking for a few people at a time. That thought became a quiet anchor: no matter how low he fell, he could still find a way to begin again.That’s what makes his story so human. It’s not about a hero who never stumbles; it’s about someone who stumbles, falls, and then chooses to rebuild from the ground up, piece by piece. Brar’s journey into food began much earlier, in Lucknow, where he was born to Ishwar Singh and Surinder Kaur. Growing up, he was drawn to the city’s street food culture, especially the local kebab vendors whose smoke‑filled stalls buzzed with flavour and stories. Their craft fascinated him, and that fascination slowly turned into a passion. He decided to train under Munir Ustad, an apprentice choice that his family didn’t immediately understand. They worried about stability, about whether cooking could ever be a “real” career. But over time, as they saw his dedication, they came around and began to support him.That early training, first under the Ustad and then at the Institute of Hotel Management in Lucknow, laid the foundation for everything that came after. Looking back now, those years seem like the quiet roots of a much larger tree. They led him to kitchens, to restaurants, to television, and eventually to the kind of life that—the quote he once posted—someone might call “doing it right.” But behind that polished image is a man who has known what it means to start over with nothing, and who still carries that memory with humility, not shame.


