This is the sixth in our series of weekly blogs by food blogger Danny Kingston aka @FoodUrchin looking back on each heat of Great British Menu 2014.
So, we are well and truly over the hump now folks. We have just completed week six of the Great British Menu, with only the Celtic regions Scotland and Wales left to go, and thus our journey is finally nearing its triumphant end. And if that opening sentence sounds weary and tired, I have to put my hands up and say that the Groundhog Day element of the competition is starting to get to me.
Don’t get me wrong, some of the dishes that have been created throughout the series so far have been amazing and the chefs have tackled the brief of recreating war time inspired menus head on. I mean, who knew there were so many different varieties of Spam? No, what is starting to unhinge me ever so slightly is the voiceover commentary.
Because if she says one particular thing about a chef, you can be certain that she’ll repeat it a THOUSAND TIMES. For instance, Paul Welburn, a strapping young fella from Yorkshire, did you know that this is his first time in the competition? Did you? Oh yes, it’s his first time.
Then there is Frances Atkins. Well she’s the Michelin-starred, experienced heavyweight this week. Yes, Michelin stars, with loads of experience. And dainty Frances is a heavyweight too. Whodathunk? And as for Colin McGurran, did you know that he just missed out getting his dish into the final last time around? Yes. He missed out. Just by an inch. And we know this because in each episode they kept showing the same montage of Colin, rubbing his face, just missing out getting his dish into the final.
By an inch. missing……just a bit..…final….inches…….arrrrggggh. Seriously, the repetition has been getting on my nerves so
much that it’s causing me to hyperventilate in front of the screen and as such, I’ve resorted to watching the show whilst wearing a gas mask. Because it’s much more effective than blowing into a paper bag. But enough hot air from me, let’s see what the guys and gal from the North East produced last week, for mentor Philip Howard, the thinking chef’s chef.
Well the opening starters round saw Frances Atkins, co-owner and Head chef of The Yorke Arms, prowl into the kitchen like a pussy cat with Dame Edna Everage glasses and proclaim that the boys better watch out because there was a female about; which was impressive fighting talk. But then Frances set about making a naff-looking toasted sandwich with jellied beer that wobbled almost as much as her bottom lip as she sort of fell to pieces, which was a shame. Ambitious Paul Welburn created a dish called ‘Duck and Soldiers’, a mishmash of duck cooked in a variety of ways and served up the thinnest looking sourdough soldiers with it.
Eggy soldiers should be not that thin.
And Colin went all on an all-out attack with his ‘Modern Ration Pack’ that included corned beef hash in mustard, a teabag containing bouillon and an exploding cherry chocolate bomb, which all amounted to rather bizarre starters to serve in my opinion but nevertheless Phil was impressed with Colin’s efforts and gave him an eight.
The fish round was no less straightforward as the competing chefs strived to push boundaries whilst still keeping to the theme. A much more composed Frances, who was using her Father’s wartime experiences as inspiration, delivered a very pretty-looking plate called ‘On the boat’ using Dover sole, squid and sea dumplings but her sharp buckthorn was a step too far for Philip’s palate. Paul’s ‘Preservation of British Waters’ showed real promise too, using cured salmon and crab cooked two ways but he scuppered his chances by forgetting to dress his bowl with brown crab butter.
Colin’s