paid work experience at their company.

It’s not the only prize on offer. The winners of the grand final will win work experience with Anton Mosimann OBE. They can also bask in the knowledge that they are in prestigious company - previous contenders have included James Martin and Jamie Oliver. Would their desserts be something that Mosimann or James Martin would approve of?
The hour and ten minutes of cooking time was up and the dishes were plated and presented. Presentation-wise they certainly looked impressive. There was a nice seasonal take on rhubarb and custard, an interesting use of in

gredients in a raspberry and basil panna cotta and some creative presentation with a milk chocolate ice cream and pistachio rondelle served in the form of a lollipop. The judges walked around with clipboards and spoons and muttered cheffy things to each other while the teams waited nervously in an adjoining room.
The head of the judges was James Tanner, TV chef and co-owner, with brother Chris, of
Tanners Restaurant in Plymouth. He seemed pleased with the overall standard saying: “For these guys this is a completely foreign environment with foreign products. I th

ink the ideas they have come up with are good. They had criteria to stick to, which most of them have. It’s a good start but now I think they realise it’s not going to be easy.”
This may have been the case but the morning’s nerves also seemed to have died down now that the first challenge was over. Nichola Harrison and Alexandra Spatar of the Blackpool and the Fylde College team said: “When we first got the brief, our minds went dead but then we put our heads together and thought – yeah that should work. It feels amazing. We’re still a bit shocked to get this far, but proud.”
The better part of four days wor

th of challenges still lay ahead of the students; challenges that would test their all-round professional skills: from interview techniques later that day to recreating a full Alan Murchison L’Ortolan menu on day two; from a Dragons Den style presentation for a contract catering business on day three to catering for the EUROLEAGUE 2013 Basketball finals in the O2 Arena on day four – all of which were as yet unknown to the competitors.
All in all a pretty magical few days for a group of students taking their first steps in the

industry. As Ed Marsh and Lydia Taylor of the University College Birmingham team said: “It’s unreal, at the start of your career to be able to say you’ve competed at the final of the Toque D’Or; you’re bound to get somewhere.” A sentiment that Anton Mosimann, James Martin and Jamie Oliver would all, no doubt, agree with.
The winners of the Toque D’Or 25th anniversary competition will be announced at a special awards dinner at The Dorchester on June 4th.