The chef and founder of the Michelin-starred restaurant the Inn at Little Washington gives us an inside look at the tumultuous joys and struggles that have brought him to his special place at the intersection of Main, Middle, and Gay.

World-renowned chef Patrick O’Connell has been recognized as a pioneer of American cuisine; his internationally acclaimed restaurant in the Virginia countryside, the Inn at Little Washington, is Michelin starred and a Relais & Châteaux hotel. Named for the three historic streets in the little town where O’Connell’s life and career have taken root, Main, Middle & Gay chronicles O’Connell’s winding journey through the rough-and-tumble restaurant world.
Growing up gay in the 1950s and working as a paperboy and a cook at a hamburger joint, O’Connell found his place with other misfits in the addictive restaurant scene, where he learned to be nimble and grew up fast while working long hours and late nights with colorful characters. He lived free-spirited on farms with friends and traveled Europe, teaching himself to cook along the way. When he opened his restaurant in an old abandoned garage, he had no idea it would grow to the heights it has achieved today.
In his first-ever memoir, O’Connell shows us the colorful evolution that has led the Inn at Little Washington to become a global destination for foodies and travelers alike.
From abandoned garage to global destination, the journey unfolds with candor and charm — secure your copy through the retailers below.


Patrick O'Connell is a self-taught chef who pioneered a regional American cuisine in a rural Virginia village. His alliance with local farmers was born of necessity more than forty years ago, when nothing but milk was delivered to the town. In 1978, he opened the Inn at Little Washington in a former garage; now the restaurant is regarded as an international culinary shrine. Chef O’Connell is referred to as “the Pope of American cuisine.” Patricia Wells of the International Herald Tribune named the Inn one of the top ten restaurants in the world, hailing O’Connell as “a rare chef with a sense of near-perfect taste, like a musician with perfect pitch.” O’Connell was asked to cook for Queen Elizabeth II on her visit to Virginia in 2007. He has appeared on Good Morning America, the Today show, The Early Show on CBS, The Martha Stewart Show, Top Chef, The Diane Rehm Show, and Charlie Rose and is a frequent guest speaker at the Smithsonian and the Culinary Institute of America.