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Former Kenya rugby sevens star Dennis Ombachi on the set of his cooking videos featuring his famous balcony with the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, in the background. Photo: AFP

How depression turned Kenyan rugby sevens star Dennis Ombachi into a TikTok cooking sensation known as ‘The Roaming Chef’

  • A bad injury forced him to retire from the game but it also gave rise to depression ‘that has always been there’
  • But inspired by the food on his travels and cooking videos, he ran a blog, became a chef and made videos that became smash hits

“Done!” – the catchphrase punctuating former rugby player Dennis Ombachi’s cooking videos is as famous as the balcony of the Nairobi flat where he films himself in action.

A former rugby sevens international, Ombachi reinvented himself to become a social media star with a global fan base in just a few years.

He has 2.3 million followers on TikTok and 1.4 million on Instagram.

Known as “The Roaming Chef”, Ombachi produces dynamically edited videos – shot against the backdrop of the Kenyan capital’s skyline and featuring his trademark monosyllabic commentary – that have earned him the 2022 TikTok award for best African content creator.

Dennis Ombachi is famous for scoring the try that took Kenya to the 2016 Rio Olympics. Photo: Sam Tsang

It was fitting recognition of his quest to recover his footing after a battle with mental illness.

Feted in his East African homeland for scoring the winning try that took Kenya’s rugby sevens team to the Rio 2016 Olympics, Ombachi played the global circuit for a decade, also taking part in two World Cups in 2013 and 2018.

But a leg-ankle fracture in 2017 was a turning point.

“It took a toll physically and mentally,” the 33-year-old father-of-two said in an interview.

“I … made up my mind that this is not something I wanted to do for the rest of my life.”

It was then that his demons confronted him.

“The depression is something that has always been there, even before I started playing rugby,” he said.

“But it manifested itself more … (during the) later years of my career,” he explained.

He rattled off a list of symptoms: “being socially withdrawn”, “drinking a lot”, “self-harm” – the evidence still visible on his forearm – and “two suicide attempts”.

He was hospitalised several times, before being diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2018.

The diagnosis was initially hard to take but proved to be “a blessing” in retrospect.

Ombachi’s secret is to keep the videos “short (and) snappy” and let the food be the star. Photo: AFP

“It was able to answer a lot of questions about my life, my personality, my actions, my behaviours, my reactions.”

Cooking has been Ombachi’s constant companion, ever since his trips to Hong Kong, Dubai and Las Vegas for rugby.

“I was good in sports. I was successful,” he said.

But away from the stadium, he felt “a bit empty”.

“Cooking sort of kept me sane, kept me (going) through my depressive periods.”

Inspired by the food he ate during his travels and the videos of British celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay, he experimented with recipes, ran a culinary blog and offered his services at parties – giving rise to his “Roaming Chef” nickname.

Following the Covid-19 pandemic, the decline of his sporting career and the birth of his first child, the self-taught chef turned his full attention to creating videos.

Success, initially on TikTok, came in 2021.

His videos now garner up to 54.6 million views and his balcony has assumed iconic status, playing host to the African 100-metres record holder Ferdinand Omanyala and Afrobeats star Davido.

Ombachi’s secret is to keep the videos “short (and) snappy”.

“No background story like ‘My grandmother taught me this, when I travelled to here’,” he said.

“Make the food the story. Don’t try and outshine the food.”

In 90 seconds, Ombachi strives to show every step of a recipe, whether Kenyan or foreign, by applying Ramsay’s principles: “Use your eyes, nose, taste. Understand the different flavours, how they work together, how they combine together.”

Even his trademark catchphrase – “Done!” – comes from a phrase he heard Ramsay use, which he “unconsciously” picked up.

In 2021, Ombachi went public with his diagnosis on what was then Twitter (now X), in a bid to “end the stigma” surrounding mental illness in Kenya.

Ombachi, who continues to see a therapist, says he’s never been more happy in his life. Photo: AFP

The country ranks sixth among African nations affected by depressive disorders, the World Health Organization said in 2017.

“I had already walked the journey … I thought ‘It’s time to tell my story. And maybe I can help one or two people’,” he said.

Today, Ombachi, who continues to see a therapist, plays down his struggle, saying: “I’ve never been more happy and productive in my life.”

Besides filming videos, he stages culinary events with food brands, supermarkets, embassies and others.

His dream is to host Gordon Ramsay – a man he has never met but whom he regards as his “mentor”, celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck or former US president Barack Obama on his balcony.

He also hopes to open a restaurant as a “legacy” for his children.

“Not now. But it’s the end goal.”

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