The penultimate heat of this year’s series of Great British Menu will hit the airwaves tonight at 8pm on BBC Two.
The programme pits the country’s top chefs against one another for the chance to serve one of their dishes at a banquet. This year, the competition celebrates fifty years of British music and the reception will be held at Abbey Road Studios, where The Beatles recorded most of their albums in the 1960s.
This week will see chefs Andrew Sheridan, Cindy Challoner and Tom Westerland representing Wales.
Born in the Welsh seaside town of Aberaeron, Cindy was the head chef of The Classroom at Cardiff and Vale College until February this year.
The acclaimed restaurant is staffed both by students and professionals and regularly hosts guest chefs - including the executive chef of Lucknam Park, Hywel Jones - for masterclasses and takeovers.
What was it like to be on GBM?
It was good, it was new. Nothing I’d experienced before which is great.
Had you taken part in competitions at all?
No, it was my first one.
Had you come across the others before, Westy or Andrew?
Yeah, Westy I’d met before because he came to Hywel Jones’ pop-ups at The Classroom – which was nice, because I got there and I thought “thank God, I know someone.”
Image: From left to right, Cindy Challoner, Tom Westerland. veteran judge Phil Howard, Andrew Sheridan. Credit: BBC Pictures
Were you pleased to have Phil Howard as your veteran judge?
It was okay; I would have liked Angela Hartnett, but yeah, Phil Howard turned up. I found he was quite brutal, but I suppose they all are aren’t they.
What did you think of the brief this year?
It was brilliant, there was so much that you could do with it. Everyone had their own idea, in opposition to the previous years.
How do you think you would have dealt with the one from last year for example?
Oh God yeah, the NHS. Last year I got the phone call, I got shortlisted and I never got through, so I knew it was the NHS and I got told to practice just in case someone pulled out but I was thinking “Oh my God what will I do for it.”
I think you just cope. It’s one of those things I think if you’re put in that situation you’ve got to make it work. It’s good, it keeps you on your toes I think.
Can