so I’m used to working closely with local suppliers and getting the most out of them. Here it’s gaining a good relationship with the Covent Garden suppliers knowing that you are going to get quality.
I’ve got a great butcher from the Lake District called Lake District Farmers and the meat is phenomenal. They’re a small company and they choose the restaurants they supply to. They supply Ramsay’s, Murano, Brett Graham at
The Ledbury. They pick who they want and we’re lucky to have them here. They’re fantastic, and I love working for passionate suppliers like that; it gives you inspiration.
Is it possible to cook seasonally and pick your ingredients in the middle of a city?

It is. You get emails sent out about what’s coming in, what’s good on the market at the moment, and then you base your menus around that. I miss having the chance to go to the purveyor and see it for yourself.
You can’t do that in London unless you have a massive brigade and time to go out, or if you have your own garden – but in London that’s definitely not going to happen! One day hopefully I’ll find something outside of London again and go back to my roots.
Where would you like to be in five years’ time?
I take most of it as it comes, I’ve got a young family so I don’t really think too far ahead. One day my missus will have a coffee shop, because she’s a great baker and hopefully one day I can have a pub – that’s what I’d love.
What are your goals while you’re at the Gherkin?
Rising Stars
Paul Welburn – head chef Rhodes W1
Dan Cox – Fera
Adam Reid - The French
Tom Sellers – Lickford Inn
Mark Greenaway - Restaurant Mark Greenaway
Guilty pleasures
Kebab
Samosa chat
Lamb brain
Pigs head (boil up and make fritters)
Top five restaurants
L’enclume
Dabbous
The Dairy
Grain Store from Bruno Loubet
At the moment, it’s basically just expanding the business, which I’ve been doing since I’ve been here. We were very much formal, fine-dining when I took over but it’s not what the customers and members wanted. We’ve now stripped it back; we’re very unfussy, it’s more natural and simplistic.
We’re constantly trying to do new things, I like using lesser-known cuts of meat like pork belly or the cheeks or offal. Anyone can cook, for example a nice fillet – it’s not difficult, and everyone seems to think that has to be on the menu. For me, I much prefer braising a jacob’s ladder or beef cheek there’s more flavour in my opinion.
What’s different about where you are now compared to other restaurants in London; what makes you stand out?
It’s the view. You have a 360 degree view of London from the top bar. It’s exclusive, you can’t just book – only on the odd occasion, so that’s always a nicety.
Which chefs have inspired you over the years, or still do inspire you?
Michael Wignall, I did a stage with him and his food’s awesome! Then there’s
Sat Bains and Gordon Ramsay back in the day – I’m talking nineties to early noughties Gordon Ramsay, not now.
Also Tom Sellers, what he’s doing at Story is brilliant. One chef in Denmark I really like is Rasmus Kofoed from Restaurant Geranium. Everyone always talks about René Redzepi – I like his food and I respect what he’s done, but it’s not really what I like, whereas Restaurant Geranium is spot-on for fine-dining. He got two stars in two or three years – he’s a phenomenal chef.
What do you think you would be doing if you hadn’t become a chef?
I used to do a lot of MMA when I was younger, I was semi-professional, and so I presume it might have been something along those lines. I did dynamic tiger freestyle kickboxing for years. It was basically just MMA freestyle kickboxing with aikido, jujitsu, stuff like that. The good thing is no one would mess with me in the kitchen!
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