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Naomi Pomeroy, 'Top Chef Masters' star and James Beard Award winner, dies in tubing accident at 49

The acclaimed Portland chef was tubing with her husband and a friend before a snag pulled her into the current.
Naomi Pomeroy smiles
Naomi Pomeroy at the Television Critics Association winter media tour in Pasadena, Calif., in 2017.Frederick M. Brown / Getty Images file

The body of award-winning Portland, Oregon, chef Naomi Pomeroy, who drowned in a tragic tubing accident over the weekend, was recovered Wednesday after a multiday search, officials said.

Pomeroy, 49, was tubing Saturday with two others in the Willamette River near Corvallis, Oregon, when she was suddenly pulled under the water after she was caught on a snag. A paddleboard leash held her down, according to an investigation by the Benton County Sheriff’s Office.

She had been tubing with her husband, fellow chef Kyle Linden Webster, her family confirmed to Portland Monthly. Fire department personnel were able to bring Webster and the third tuber safely to shore but were unable to recover Pomeroy’s body. Sonar, underwater cameras and drones were unsuccessful because of heavy debris, officials said.

People canoeing on the Willamette River spotted her body around 10 a.m. Wednesday, about half a mile upstream of Hyak Park between Corvallis and Albany, the sheriff’s office said.

"BCSO marine deputies arrived shortly after, located a deceased female on a shallow section of bedrock near the middle of the river with about one to two feet of water," the office said.

A beacon of culinary innovation and a trailblazer in Portland's dining scene, Pomeroy taught herself how to cook before she rose to fame with her French-influenced restaurant, Beast, which won her the prestigious James Beard Award in 2014.

Before that, she was selected as Food & Wine magazine's best new chef in 2009 and gained greater popularity when she competed on "Iron Chef" in 2010 and "Top Chef Masters" in 2011. She was also a recurring judge on "Top Chef."

"The larger Portland community is in shock that one of its brightest stars has met a sudden and tragic end to a vibrant life," food critic Karen Brooks wrote in Portland Monthly.

Pomeroy had recently opened a frozen custard shop, Cornet Custard, that offers uniquely flavored scoops of thick eggy custard in beeswax-coated cake cones. She was also preparing to open a restaurant next door, alongside fellow restaurateur Luke Dirks.

"I was always inspired by her extreme creativity & commitment to her craft. She was always ahead of the curve and stood strong for everything she believed about what was the proper way to feed people good food & support her culinary community," fellow chef and TV personality Amanda Freitag said in a tribute on X.

Chefs Dominique Crenn and Gavin Kaysen also posted tributes, remembering Pomeroy as a "beautiful soul."

When Pomeroy was listed as one of Oprah magazine's 10 Women on the Rise in 2010, she told it that she would like to be remembered "as someone who helped make the idea of knowing where our food comes from an everyday phenomenon."

In a statement Monday, Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., mourned the loss.

"Naomi was not just a fabulous chef and entrepreneur, but an amazing human being," he said. "Her impact went far beyond Portland, helping establish our leadership and reputation for food excellence. She will be greatly missed."