Walking along Upper Berkeley Street you may be forgiven for not noticing Sixtyone Restaurant at first glance. Its simple white and black exterior is a subtle reflection of not only the interior but of the dishes created inside by chef patron Arnaud Stevens.
Some of his signature dishes include Carpaccio of octopus and roast squab pigeon with snail and parsley risotto; texture and flavour is very important to him which is why these dishes have been on the menu from day one. Despite being 40 minutes late for this interview with Arnaud, thanks to public transport, he still had a smile for me and some time to spare to talk about his restaurant. “Myself and my head chef Killian Lynch wanted to open a restaurant where we would go out and enjoy ourselves,” explained Arnaud. “When you enter Sixtyone you get a real feel of what I like – I love copper, wood and casual environments. We’re not here to do fine dining, it’s a neighbourhood restaurant, we want to look after people in this area who want to enjoy their local restaurant.”
You can see from the eye-catching décor and the calm, relaxing atmosphere that Arnaud is a chef who knows what sort of establishment he wants to be working in. But what inspired him to join the culinary world in the first place? “My grandma she was a private cook in a chateau in France,” he explained. “I often got to experience that on family holidays – that was an inspiration straight away to get into this industry. “She used to cook real rustic, classic dishes using braising French methods so coq au vin and bourguignon, whole bird roasts – it was really inspirational.” Arnaud knew at the age of 12 that he wanted to be a chef, after a visit with his dad to a Michelin starred restaurant in Angers.
He said: “It was all very grand. There were silver cloches, the service was immaculate and the food was incredible. I still remember at that age thinking ‘this is what I want to do as a job’.” Born in Birmingham but raised in Devon, at 16 Arnaud took his first steps to achieving his childhood dream when he started a day release apprenticeship at the Imperial Hotel in Torquay which had five stars at the time. “I was paid absolute peanuts and I worked my nuts off!” said Arnaud. “But I learnt loads from that experience.” Next stop for Arnaud was London, working with celebrity chef Gary Rhodes at City Rhodes. “It was a massive change,” he explained. “It was almost like I had to learn everything again. It was just a different level of cooking, it had one star and
Gary was in the kitchen cooking full on. People perceive him as a TV chef but he was very hands-on. “He was incredibly driven and he would be in the kitchen at 6.30 in the morning, way before any of the others, which is weird, you wouldn’t expect it. He did the hours with the boys and that stood out to me.” Despite working with the likes of Pierre Koffman, Tom Aikens, Jason Atherton and Richard Corrigan, Arnaud believes his grounding was City Rhodes which prepared him for future experiences in top kitchens such as Belmond Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons “Le Manoir was incredible,” said Arnaud. “It’s an institution and you know it when you walk in. You’re stepping into history and it’s well respected.”
Nostalgia aside, Arnaud makes it very clear that working in these kitchens has taught him everything he needs to succeed today. From sourcing ingredients and the quality of them to the discipline required in the kitchen and control of costs. “There was no waste at Pierre Koffmans’ Le T’ent Claire,” explained Arnaud. “And here at Sixtyone I have two great senior sous chefs and a great head chef and it’s about controlling the guys on how they order. Also checking the fridges and being in there