Shay Cooper, executive chef, of The Bingham restaurant, began his career in 1997 at Paul Heathcote’s School of Excellence, Manchester. He has worked at Putney Bridge in London; Juniper in Altrincham, Cheshire; and the Vineyard at Stockcross, under executive chef John Campbell. Shay then became head chef at the Hotel Endsleigh in Devon, owned by Olga Polizzi, where the restaurant was awarded three AA rosettes. He then joined The Bingham gaining three AA rosettes and his first Michelin star.
He has earned praise for his light touch, allowing his ingredients themselves to do the heavy lifting. Shay creates simple dishes with subtly sophisticated flavours and textures. One of England’s young generation of up-and-coming, ultra-talented chefs he has been awarded the Hotel Catey for best chef (under 250 covers) in 2010.
Photographs by kind permission of Malcolm Campbell, www.malcolmcampbellphotography.com
Shay, give us a little outline of the current role here at the Bingham.
I'm Executive Chef of a 15 bedroom boutique hotel with a 60 cover restaurant and a garden room space, banqueting rooms that cater up to 100 people. We're a busy wedding venue, we did 92 weddings last year.
It's a stunning location isn't it here next to the Thames.
Yeah.
It really is. It's absolutely idyllically beautiful here isn't it.
Yeah it's gorgeous, right by the river and I guess it's kind of not too far out of London, both for people who want to have this sort of scenery without having to go to a country house hotel.
Yeah.
It's accessible and that's why we do very well and we're busy.
It is exclusive use mostly for weddings or?
No not at all.
Oh really, right so lots going on?
So, that runs concurrent. Come summer we can be doing four weddings a weekend.
That puts a big challenge on you and the team what you do when everything is rocking?.
Yeah, well initially it did but we're at a stage now with a solid team and everyone knows their roles and the two don't meet so much"¦
Yes OK.
...in terms of obviously there's support between the two kitchens. We have two small kitchens, one's just been re-done, we've generated a bit more of pot-wash area upstairs. I think you saw it last time you came here.
Yes, I did it was quite tiny from memory.
It was but, it's a good size now that works better.
Between the team, Shay, how many in the team?
Eleven.
Eleven in the team.
Eleven yeah, so, like on a seven day rota obviously you've got about seven guys on the team, in the team upstairs, about four downstairs doing the banqueting and pastry.
And restaurant covers, what sort of covers are you doing in the restaurant?
Well weekends we'll be doing 50/55 on a Friday/Saturday night and Sunday lunch. A pretty strong lunch trade nowadays. We do between 25, up to 20/25 most days, the early part of the week's a bit quieter, mid-week's covers again around about the same, sort of 20/25 range. That's at this point but in summer we open up this balcony and every night it's pretty busy.
I can imagine people using this with views of the river.
And we offer everything as well from a bar menu, afternoon tea's a big service here for us, nowadays, again up to 25/30 covers at the weekends, Friday, Saturday, Sunday in summer, you know, it ticks over very nicely. And obviously you've got the other hotel offers that you of course have to do, breakfast and whatnot.
Yeah. Of course, of course. In terms of your career, you've been hugely successful. Three rosettes at Talland Bay"¦
Yep.
"¦and you moved from Talland Bay in Looe, you went to work for Olga Polizzi, at Hotel Endsleigh, three rosettes there, you've come here, three rosettes here, a Michelin star here, I believe you won best hotel under 250 covers for the Catey's"¦
Yeah.
"¦what are the goals for the business now? Where do you go next?
I mean, I guess for the business, we want to become more profitable, I mean it's profitable currently but"¦
You can always make more.
Yeah that's how the bos

s is going to look at it.
Of course, of course any boss would.
But in terms of for me and the kitchen I pride myself on being a complete hotel chef and I think every element is as important as each other, for us to achieve, what we have we have is fantastic. We've taken the Bingham from where no one had heard of it, it had one rosette, it was in danger of losing that. So to be where we are now is quite an achievement. We are essentially a wedding venue, with 92 weddings each year. I mean there's not many other hotels that'll do those kind of numbers but in spite of that, we've still get a great reputation for the food here at the Bingham "¦
Yes.
"¦is a really good thing. In terms of what I want, I'm not looking towards, you know the two stars necessarily, but with regard to my boys, I've got a strong, bunch of enthusiastic, loyal guys and they want to do the best they can and we want to keep pushing the food forward of course"¦
Yes.
"¦to stay motivated and just keep learning new techniques, putting new dishes on, trying new things and being ambitious like that"¦
Yes.
"¦and hopefully things'll fall into place in terms of accolades.
Yeah, no that's a fair comment. Now you have been very successful with your food. If you had to pigeon-hole your food style, and I know no one likes doing that"¦
Yeah.
"¦how would you describe Shay Cooper's food?
I mean essentially it's refined comfort food.
Okay. Really?
Well it's got it's"¦How would you say? Like at the heart of the dish there has to be an element of familiarity about that the guest can