Soy Sauce Scientist
Forbes Middle East - English|Jan 2024
Peggy Cherng built PANDA EXPRESS into the McDonald's of Chinese food by using her engineering background and big data to exponentially spice up sales-making her a multibillionaire along the way.
Chase Peterson-Withorn
Soy Sauce Scientist

The sweltering heat of July in Los Angeles isn’t slowing Peggy Cherng down. The 75-year-old billionaire cofounder of Panda Express is strolling between the sleek research buildings and Japanese Zen gardens that frame the 100acre City of Hope hospital campus, where she’s funding a $100 million program for blending Eastern and Western medicine practices. “It’s all about how we can bring the best we have as Asian-Americans to the West,” she says.

Cherng should know. She emigrated from Hong Kong in the 1960s, got a doctorate in electrical engineering in the 1970s, then promptly quit a promising career developing software to use her STEM skills in an altogether different industry: fast food, creating the perfect mix of Chinese cuisine for American palates.

Four decades later, what began as a single restaurant in a Southern California shopping mall has grown into a 2,400store juggernaut, dishing out more than $5 billion worth of chow mein, Beijing beef and orange chicken every year in food courts, airport terminals and drive-thru windows across the nation.

Most Americans grab their Chinese food from one of two places: the mom-and-pop joint around the corner—or Panda Express, which has eaten up 43% of the Asian takeout market and has ten times as many locations as its closest competitors, sit-down chain P.F. Chang’s and hibachi grill Sarku Japan.

But Panda Express’ secret sauce isn’t the sweet and sour; it’s Cherng’s technical prowess and methodical mind. “A lot of people in the restaurant business aren’t educated as engineers,” she says. “I have an advantage.”

This story is from the Jan 2024 edition of Forbes Middle East - English.

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This story is from the Jan 2024 edition of Forbes Middle East - English.

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