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.
Tom Westerland - known to most as Westy - is the head chef of the Brasserie at Lucknam Park in Wiltshire. Last year, he became the second of executive chef Hywel Jones' proteges to take the National Chef of Wales title.
We spoke to him to find out how being on GBM compared to other competitions he's taken part in.
What was it like being on GBM this year?
I couldn’t believe it, I watched it all while I was growing up and it was one of the things that inspired me to be a chef. It was an honour to do it.
And you were lucky enough to come on with a new production team and studio.
Yeah, it was outstanding. I spoke to Andrew who did it last year and he said how much better it was than the last kitchen. It was quite an interesting one because the studio where they filmed it was where the Teletubbies was filmed; the kitchen was where tubby hill used to be.
Did that inspire your food then?
Oh yeah of course.
Image: From left to right, Andrew Sheridan, Cindy Challoner, Tom Westerland. Credit: BBC Pictures
Had you come across Andrew and Cindy before?
I used to go to Cardiff and Vale college and I still speak to my college tutor Eric who works there, plus Hywel’s son goes there, so we’ve done a few pop-ups and dinners. So I’ve met Cindy a couple of times. It was quite nice to have someone in there that I knew.
Were you happy to have Phil Howard as a veteran judge?
When we saw the line-up I was hoping for Daniel Clifford or Richard Corrigan. I might’ve said just before he walked in the door, “I hope it’s not Phil Howard,” and then he came in.
He was very good, he was quite critical about everything but the feedback was very useful, fair and constructive.
You’ve taken part in several competitions before, how was GBM different?
I’ve done a fair amount - the South West chef of the year, the past two years I’ve been in the final 10 of the Craft Guild and I won National Chef of Wales last year - but GBM was a completely different monster.
If I had to say one thing, I’d say the cooking was the easiest part of it. All the interviews, having cameras everywhere, that made it harder.
At the end of the day, a competition is a competition, but when you’ve got somebody staring at you every single second of the day it makes it difficult.
What did you think of the brief this year?
When I first got it I thought it was quite exciting but I didn’t know what to do with it. I thought it was quite a difficult one to start with and link to music. I started listening to music and thinking about how they linked to memories, I thought back to my childhood and times in my life that I really enjoyed and tried to find a song that expressed that feeling.
Did you have dishes in mind already?
My fish course