Paul, maybe you can just introduce yourself. Tell us a bit about yourself and your current role.
I am Paul Foster I have been at Tuddenham Mill for four months, I was previously Sous Chef for Sat Bains for two years at Restaurant Sat Bains in Nottingham and I have come here to take it in a different direction; to do my own food and develop my own style. We have a fifty seater restaurant with a Private Dining room for 25. We have 15 bedrooms ...so a nice small scale. We have a team of six, including myself, in the kitchen which is a decent size. There were five when I came here - they let me have the extra one, so there is always four in the kitchen so it is quite consistent in the kitchen at the moment.
So what are the goals for you? And what are the goals for the business Paul?
I want to push it as far as I can. I want to do something different. I want to try and stand out in Suffolk because at the moment I think there is only one 3 Rosette restaurant - The Bildeston Crown and there is nothing that really stands out; nothing doing the sort of food that I want to do and hopefully make a name for myself.
OK, how would you describe your food style?
I want it to be as natural as possible with purity of flavour; not getting too carried away with techniques but keep it interesting and clever and unique. Really working with the seasons.
When you say natural? You mean, you're not using products such as meat glue and alike?
No I try and steer away from all that. I use things like agar agar - it's a natural substance anyway, but only to achieve different textures and things. But I won't be going crazy trying to make warm jellies and that sort of thing and foams, I just want to keep a real purity of flavour.
You mentioned Sat (Bains), earlier on, how big an influence has he been on your career?

Massive, really. He really taught his chefs taste over technique Sat is all about flavour. It can be very easy to get carried away, especially as a first time Head Chef wanting to impress, sometimes with crazy ideas - trying something new out and pushing hard because you are let free. The owners are really supportive, and let me do what I want here, so I have got to rein myself in - I have Sat in the back of my head saying "Calm down!"
I think that is a good philosophy. How important is it to you, in the nicest possible way, shake the mantel of Sat Bains off? Because Sat does a fantastic job; He does what he does; He is highly recognised for what he does but is there an importance of you to rise up as Paul Foster Head Chef?
I think so but I don't want to disregard Sat Bains as a person, because I learnt so much from him.
Of course not, but what you can't do is open a Restaurant Sat Bains here and simply replicate the menu.
Yes, that's true, I have got to be me. I have got to take the best things I learnt from him (Sat Bains) and develop it in my own way. And just become unique.

Paul, what has been your greatest success to date, you have only been here 4 months but what have you achieved so far?
I think it has been getting the team on board, and getting them around to my way of thinking. It was a tough job.
How have you gone about that?
Umm, constantly preaching and pushing on. Telling them passionately exactly what I want from each of them; getting the consistency in the food. I really wanted them to appreciate the ingredients and show respect for them... and that comes through now. That was my biggest battle. I showed them the first menu I introduced. They could all produce it but they weren't questioning themselves they weren't tasting the food; they weren't questioning how far they could take it.
And what has been your biggest learning curve, to date?
I think, like I said earlier, you realise that you are on your own now. Whereas Sat gave me a lot of free rein on dishes and recipes and development in the restaurant, he was always a safety net. He was always the final "Yes or No", whereas now the buck stops with me.
Every plate, now, is down to me. You always know that, but it's the realisation. The first day of a new menu I s**t myself. I have become a lot more self-critical.
I guess it is always very difficult moving from Sous Chef to Head Chef, you never know if you're ready for it until you do it.
Yes. I had this conversation with Sat before I left, he said I was ready. Had he said I wasn't ready, I'd have respected him, and I would have stayed for longer and done what was necessary. It was pretty nerve racking at first, but you just have got to go straight in there.
Would you say that Sat (Bains) has been your biggest influence in your career to date?
Yes, definitely. The only way to describe it was like a finishing school. I am nowhere near finished but it geared me in that way and set me on