something like that and he said: “I loved the experience of it. I like the TV thing - I enjoyed the process. Surrounding yourself with creative people and I enjoyed the process of putting a TV show together.
“Ultimately, you go on something like GBM because you know it's going fill the restaurant if you do well.”
Regarding the first time, Nathan said: “I knew going on it was a bit of a risk, because the restaurant was so new - I think it pushed the restaurant forward five years.
“We knew we'd done quite well so we knew it was going to be busy, which meant that we could put the menu together with the dishes that we wanted to put together not the dishes we had to put together to build and to stay in business.”
He added: "I don't know what I'd gain from doing it again. When I did it the second time I felt enormous amount of pressure to perform. I thought that the first year we snuck in under the radar and nobody knew what was going on.
“But I wouldn't want to go back now, having felt the pressure of the second year, the third year would be even worse.”
On winning a Michelin star Nathan said: “It doesn't feel real. The thing that made it even sweeter was that Gaz got his well-deserved and overdue two stars.
“So, Gaz was a massive part of my life and wouldn't have been able to do it without him. So, for me as an apprentice of him, for him to have got his two and for us to have got our first one on the same day you couldn't really write it and it's class for the area.”

SY23
Nathan says that when he wrote down his goals for the restaurant, he wanted people to leave 'feeling like they had eaten at a particular location.'
“I want you to come here and feel like you've actually been in the area," he explained. "So, whether it's the foraging that we've put on the plate, whether it's the other bits and bobs that have gone on the plate that makes you go 'oh cool we got that from SY23' because that's where it's from."
Despite having a well-formulated plan for the restaurant, Covid threw a spanner in the works causing it to close its doors not long after it originally opened.
He said: “As horrendous as covid has been for business, this restaurant would not be the restaurant it is now without it. I needed a break. I was at the end of my rope. I think if we hadn't stopped when we stopped I'd have snapped.
“Because we stopped, we had thinking time, we could change what the business was and then in terms of what it's become now it's completely different to how we envisioned it. I thought it was gonna be a casual restaurant, but now it has definitely changed.”