everyone can have a laugh.”
Having a light, friendly atmosphere is the most important thing for Daniel at the Flitch of Bacon, and the menu reflects that.
“We are going to have a couple of sharing dishes because we think that’s important, it starts with fish and chips and goes all the way up," he explained. "I have five kids, but I don’t get to see them, so this was going to be a project where I can go home and spend an afternoon with the kids. Some restaurants around here won’t even let kids in, it drives me mad.”
Opening Flitch and Bacon is not Daniel's only achievement this year, winning the AA Chefs' Chef 2015 was an unexpected moment for him, as for the past six or seven years has been voted to go to the event.
“I didn’t expect it, I was told that I had to go, and I didn’t really understand why," he said. "I just thought ‘no, I’m never going to win that’. I had been talking to Clare about ten minutes beforehand, we were saying it was shit that you would have to cook for everyone the next year, if you won. I was pouring myself a glass of water, started taking a mouthful and then everyone stood up around me. Claude Bosi leant over and said ‘get up you fucking muppet, you’ve won!'”

Daniel aims to push his restaurants further every day, which can be an advantage, but also deter him from seeing himself, his restaurants and his food the way that the people on the outside see them.
He said; “I didn’t sleep that whole night. Because I still think I’m a small little chef in Cambridge. I still drive home every night and ask myself if I’m good enough. I still put dishes on the menu and think ‘are they good enough?’ The day I got two stars, I sat there and thought to myself ‘fucking hell, we aren’t two stars’. You never look at yourself, you always look outside at everybody else.”
Daniel wasn’t very academic, and throughout his adolescence felt pressured to work hard, due to having an older brother which he ‘felt second best’ to.
“When I became a chef it was like I was home," said Daniel. "But thing is you get pushed back so much, you think you’re never good enough for anyone you ever work for. So that stays in your mind, and you get to the point where you open up your own restaurant, and so many people have criticized you through your journey when you’re learning to be a chef, that suddenly you have got this responsibility of being ‘the chef’ and you start doubting yourself. It was only 18 months ago that I sat back and said ‘wow I’m really proud of this’.
"Everyone who ends up in a kitchen has come from the same background, they feel like they’ve got something to prove. A chef’s mentality is different to anybody else in the world. You surround yourself with great people.”

Ultimately, Daniel want’s the Flitch of Bacon to be the first Michelin star in Essex, and he has big plans for the future.
He said: “Firstly, I want it to be busy… of course I want a star! When I knew that we were going to open tonight, I stood outside at half four and I had tears running down my face because I thought ‘fuck we are actually here’."
He added: "It’s funny, three months before I bought the Flitch of Bacon, Michelin inspected at Midsummer and I said to the inspector, ‘where do you eat in Essex?’ and he couldn’t answer me!
“You either go for it, or you don’t.”
By Katie Pathiaki
@canteenkatie