Image copyright Shutterstock

Anthony Bourdain, who died on Friday, was not your average TV chef. You would not see him regularly standing in a studio, talking viewers through his steps as he threw small bowls of ingredients into a pan.

This presenter was typically found on the road - and specifically on the road less travelled. You would find him eating street food in Peru or dining in people's homes in Haiti; he would turn up in post-Gaddafi Libya or the Democratic Republic of Congo. His shows were not straightforward holiday guides, but about delving headfirst into cultures and cuisines.

Image copyright Peter Souza Image caption Anthony Bourdain met Barack Obama for an episode of his travel show in Hanoi, Vietnam in 2016

His breakthrough book (Kitchen Confidential, 2000) was a tell-all memoir about working in haute cuisine and a huge bestseller, but it was the travel shows that earned him a truly global fan base.

He was the exuberant, enthusiastic and empathetic host of first A Cook's Tour, on the Food Network; then Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations and The Layover on the Travel Channel; and finally Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown on CNN, which he was filming when he was found dead in Kayserberg, near Colmar in the Alsace region, after an apparent suicide.

Image copyright Shutterstock Image caption Bourdain seen on the show No Reservations in 2005

The documentary-style programmes would see him eating his way around a country, uncovering talented local chefs, unusual dishes and particularly unique restaurants. Occasionally a celebrity would pop up along the way - Iggy Pop in Miami, Bill Murray in New York's Hudson Valley. All encounters were unscripted, he said.

"I'm not a Middle East expert. I'm not an Africa expert. I'm not a foreign policy wonk," Bourdain told Fast Company magazine in 2014. "But I see aspects of these countries that regular journalists don't. If we have a role, it's to put a face on people who you might not otherwise have seen or cared about."

Viewers appreciated this personal touch. Among the many tributes to him on social media, there were numerous tweets from people who liked that he did not waltz into a new place and attempt to sum it up neatly.

In the Africa is a Country blog, which seeks to expose stereotypical and reductive representations of the continent, there is a 2013 article praising Bourdain's South Africa episode on the Parts Unknown series.

"He seems uncharacteristically defeated or confounded by this place and its people. And that is fine," it says.

(Though it notes that he does fall into some traps and awkward moments too.)

Iran was the country that surprised him the most, Bourdain told National Geographic.

"The people you meet, the mood, and the streets are very different than Iranian foreign policy and the Iran we have to deal with on a geopolitical level," he said.

His shows were not just about taking viewers to places they had never been, he also had a knack for taking local viewers along for the ride too.

Reza H Akbari, an Iranian-American writer and NGO worker, was among those who enjoyed watching his travels in Iran.

"Thank you for dedicating your life to understanding & shedding light on the 'complicated' parts of our world," he tweeted.

The New Yorker once called him a "travelling statesman" - inspired by an episode in Vietnam where he dined with then-President Barack Obama - yet his language was rarely diplomatic and own political opinions regularly came crashing to the fore.

In one undiplomatic outburst, he told TMZ he would never go to North Korea for his show, calling it "bad taste" to eat in a country where "most of the population are starving" and damning North Korean leader Kim Jong-un as "chubby" because "nobody else eats".

He was also reportedly banned from Azerbaijan after making a trip to the Armenian-claimed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, with the Azeri foreign ministry saying he was blacklisted for "violating territorial integrity and sovereignty", according to Buzzfeed.

He would also sometimes launch into expletive-laden tirades about how countries have been mistreated by foreign powers.

In his book A Cook's Tour, for example, Bourdain discussed his hatred for US statesman Henry Kissinger.

"Once you've been to Cambodia, you'll never stop wanting to beat Henry Kissinger to death with your bare hands."

Bourdain's wit and wisdom

"Travel changes you. As you move through this life and this world you change things slightly, you leave marks behind, however small. And in return, life - and travel - leaves marks on you. Most of the time, those marks - on your body or on your heart - are beautiful. Often, though, they hurt."

"Your body is not a temple, it's an amusement park. Enjoy the ride."

"Maybe that's enlightenment enough: to know that there is no final resting place of the mind; no moment of smug clarity. Perhaps wisdom is realising how small I am, and unwise, and how far I have yet to go."

"Skills can be taught. Character you either have or you don't have."

"Assume the worst. About everybody. But don't let this poisoned outlook affect your job performance. Let it all roll off your back. Ignore it."

But in particular, Bourdain has been feted for treating different cultures and different foods with respect.

Online posts from social media users in the Philippines, for example, credited Bourdain with introducing Western audiences to their cuisine.

Filipino chef Joel Binamira thanked him for "shining the global spotlight" on their food in an Instagram post, while others praised the episode of Parts Unknown filmed in the country in which he called Filipinos "probably the most giving of all people on the planet".

And one Twitter user posted a thread about him bumping into Bourdain at a food festival and speaking to him about his parents' home country of Trinidad and Tobago.

"You trusted him with Your Heritage," the thread reads. "He understood the complexity of people just as well as he understood the complexity of food."