from the time pressure other dishes may incur.
And while distilling the scotch-bonnet chillies, making the chocolate, fermenting the pineapples all take days to do, he can prepare them ahead of time in batches.
His inventiveness knows little bounds - other recipes call for a pink pepper distillation, used amongst other things in a sorbet with dandelion cordial.
He came up with the elderflower masa (made using dried corn, cooked in an alkaline solution to break it down, make its nutritional value more available and its flavour more prominent) dandelion and macadamia recipe included in the book by combining a technique picked up in Mexico City with British ingredients.
Making Angel Delight gourmet
The chef loves dialling into techniques and flavours which - despite living in an increasingly global food world - don't tend to make it onto our plates.
However, despite clues to the contrary, the chef isn't out to put incongruous ingredients in dishes just for the sake of it.
Another of his dishes - caramelised white chocolate mousse with Sichuan pepper - is inspired by a British (albeit unrefined) dessert the chef enjoyed as a child: Butterscotch Angel Delight.
"Angel Delight is properly cheap comfort," he laughed, explaining that although he doesn't tell guests that he made the dish with it in mind, "every now and again, someone picks up on it and goes 'Oh, butterscotch angel delight' and it reminds you that you're on the same wavelength."
"As a chef working at a certain level you want to use the best ingredients that you can, you want to make everything as delicious as you can, but you want it to be - if possible - a little bit comforting."
The combination with pepper came from a recent trip to Chengdu in China, and, capturing the flavour of the spice through distillation, he casts it in a different light. "Often the flavour is knocked to one side by the effect, that numbing effect of eating it."
The dessert is served with an osmanthus iced tea - an aromatic Chinese flower with tropical notes of peach, which resembles elderflower and carries a unique aromatic flavour in the same way.
Eddie's pantry staples
And this is what makes Eddie's food so truly unique: by stocking his pantry with unusual concoctions, his one man-band can push on and thrive.
"I know I'll always have osmanthus syrup, fermented pineapple liquid, things that I feel many people aren't using in the UK. It's a nice way to make the food taste fairly unique to here."