Daniel Clifford is a busy man. As well as being the chef patron of Cambridge's two Michelin star restaurant, Midsummer House, he is the executive chef at The Flitch of Bacon and a judge on the BBC Series: Great British Menu.
Since he gave Mark Abott the head chef position at Midsummer House, he told The Staff Canteen, he has a little bit more time to spare to, in his words "get out and look for more young talent that I can hopefully poach and take back" to his restaurant.
The UK Young Seafood Chef of the Year Competition finals take place today in Grimsby, Lincolnshire, after a series of regional heats over the course of April and May. Organised by the Grimsby Institute, the competition is held in association with Seafish, the public body funded by DEFRA to support the UK seafood industry.
The nine finalist college teams will have to cook a three-course meal using only sustainable fish.
The competition is both seen as a means of inspiring young talent and a way of teaching sustainable practices when it comes to sourcing, preparing and eating fish, which Daniel Clifford considers crucial.
Future chefs must care about the future
The chef remembers the time of cod shortages, which he said "just shows that we can't keep taking things out of the water and using and not giving it the chance to grow on and give us future stocks of beautiful products."
"Fish should be treated like asparagus. It's got a season, it should be respected. We should be eating certain things at certain times of year when it's plentiful, we shouldn't be taking it out when it's too small and it hasn't reproduced itself."
Chefs not only have a responsibility to serve sustainable fish because they are training the chefs of the future, but because chefs are accountable to their customers, whose expectations have changed."It would be commercial suicide to put things on the menu that aren't sustainable."
Sorting the wheat from the chaff
Another aspect of competitions like YSCOTY do, the chef explained, is to build young chefs' confidence in their pursuit of excellence. They also help define who has the dedication and the skill to become great.
"It's a learning curve. I'm not one of these people that believes that there shouldn't be a first second and third place and everyone should get a pat on