It’s a sunny day on the beach, the kind of day you only seem to get a handful of a year these days – clear blue skies, the smell of hot tarmac from the promenade and the sound of people having fun.
Beside me a line of people queue for ice creams at a snack hut attached to a modest-looking

eatery called ‘Bistro on the Beach’. The man serving the cones looks to be in his sixties but with a slim frame, a cheeky smile and a mischievous intelligence in his eyes that belies his age. He could be the archetypal jolly ice cream man. But he isn’t. He is Mario Lesnik, former Maitre Chef de Cuisine at Harrods and Claridge’s and something of an industry legend. So why is he serving ice creams to teenagers on a beach in Southbourne, a sleepy suburb of Bournemouth? That’s what I’m here to find out.
Once Mario has finished serving his customers we sit down on one of the tables that line the outside of the bistro and eat New Forest ice cream. Mario has the pleasantly lined face of Mediterranean types who have spent much of their lives in the sun. This presumably is because he comes from Slovenia, not because of his time in Southbourne. He speaks English fluently with an Eastern European accent that slips occasionally into sounding like French. He gestures at the red brick edifice of the bistro behind us. He would like to put up an awning across the front he tells me but it would cost £25,000, money he doesn’t want to spend.
It becomes clear almost immediately that he has a bit of a love / hate relationship with the building. It is indeed surprisingly ugly, looking almost like a council building which, I soon discover, is because it is a council building – Mario leases it from Bournemouth Borough Council who still own the bricks and mortar hence his reluctance to spend money on it. As Mario continues to list the problems with the bistro’s outward appearance, I begin to wonder if the love / hate relationship doesn’t lean more towards the hate end of the spectrum.

The Bistro on the Beach is in fact a “café-bistro” combining a daytime beachside café offering with a more upmarket table service bistro. In the evenings the day time operation switches to a smart-casual candle lit dining venue, offering contemporary British and Mediterranean Cuisine.
I have a quick glance at the menu displayed on the wall behind me. There are bistro classics like Caesar salad, pan-roasted duck breast and minute steak but there are also fish and chips, nachos and jacket potatoes with baked beans or tuna. The menu seems to sum up the spilt personality of the place – one with its head in the clouds of top class cuisine and the other dragged firmly down to earth by accidents of position, place and clientele; a chef who wants to serve great food to discerning customers and a building that wants to serve fish and chips to people who… well… who want fish and chips. Again the question arises – why?
The answer arrives via a whistle-stop tour of Mario’s career. Born in Jeruzalem (yes, that’s right) in Slovenia, Mario, or Marjan, came from a culinary family. His parents ran a restaurant in Slovenske Konjice; his mother came from a line of great cooks and his father was a wine-growing expert. As often in such families, Mario didn’t want to be a chef. He first wanted to be a chimney sweep then the captain of an ocean liner. He enrolled into a training academy for seamen but soon dropped out because of poor eyesight. His true calling only became apparent when helping out with the food for his grandmother’s 70
th birthday. During the birthday speeches his father mentioned that young Mario had found his calling in the kitchen and the idea seemed to stick.

After a four-year apprenticeship and a brief stint in the army, Mario’s career took him to Vienna then Germany then the Channel Islands where he met his wife, and finally London, where he started working in the Hilton, Park Lane. After a year he moved to the Connaught where he worked under the legendary Michel Bourdin working his way up to senior sous chef in his seven years there from 1976 to 1983.
It was then that his career really took off with his move to
Claridge’s as Maitre Chef de Cuisine. Mario was still young blood at 32, and was tasked with sweeping out the cobwebs, a job he took with “open arms but