This month's Featured Chef
Tom Aikens
Chef Patron & Director, Restaurant Tom Aikens & Tom's Kitchen
Tom, first and foremost thank you very much for meeting with us today. I appreciate you are very busy. Let's start by you telling us a little bit about your current role.
Well, basically it's Tom Aikens Fine Dining Restaurant. We've had one star since we opened and last year - sorry the year before last, we got the rising two and we have 5 AA rosettes. It's all good and going in the right direction.
How many do you have on your team?
On the pastry we have 2-3 and in the rest of the kitchen there are 7 or 8: round about 10 people in total. I will probably take on more chefs, and go upto 13, around October time when things start to pick up for Christmas.
So London gets quiet during the summer, doesn't it?
Yes, it's the opposite to everywhere else. Everyone wants to get out of London in the summer and wants to come to the city in the winter.
OK, your Rising 2 Stars - it's been well documented that at 26 you had 2 stars at Pied à Terre, does that add more pressure because you have had two stars before?
Well, the whole Pied à Terre was an exceptional part of my life and career; some good some bad - like The Good, The Bad and The Ugly really (chuckling) but I still look back with a fair amount of fondness. Having two stars at 26 made me who I am; it made my career; it gave me a name so from that point of view you couldn't ask for anymore. And now, when I look at 26 year olds who I have had in my kitchen or 26 year olds that I meet - I think "I must have been f***ing mad". At 26 I had no management skills "¦ nothing apart from just cooking. (Laughter)
But that is true of many 26 year olds, isn't it?
Yes, but I was very determined, very stubborn, very blinkered, and the only thing that really mattered was Michelin; Michelin; Michelin and nothing else. Nothing got in my way. But it was incredibly hard work. I literally had a change over with Richard (Neat) in the kitchen for two weeks - which was weird!
I was interested to read, in your book, that you described Richard as a "Nut ball"; they were your words.
Yes, he was a "Nut ball" (laughter)
How would people describe you, now Tom?
Well, then I was a "Nut ball" as well, but now "¦ well many people decide before they have even met me "¦ as the saying goes "mud sticks" and still, sometimes I do get labelled "Bad boy" or "Nasty".
You do often see "Tom Aikens, bad boy" in the papers, don't you?
Yes.
But that's not a bad thing, from a marketing point of view?
No, it's not but when they ALWAYS go back to Pied à Terre and how I was there. And I was "¦. Part of it was my own insecurities about what I was doing there and the hardness of the job and the pressure; and I didn't deal with it particularly well and my way of dealing with it was being an angry son of a b**ch. And I probably had very good teachers, in a way, Richard Neat being one of them because he was, oh my God, an absolute mental case! But the experience that I gained from Pied à Terre in the 4-5 years that I did, I got a lot from it, including what not to be!
Yes.
When I left I was absolutely exhausted, working 18 hours a day; 6 days a week takes it's toll on you, so I was kind of at my wits end anyway. Having 2-3 years out at that time was amazing - I could take my time and decide what I wanted to do; where I wanted to go. It was that first day, when I left Pied à Terre and the s**t hit the fan; I thought "Fantastic - I am going to have more than 5 hours sleep tonight!" (Laughter)
Every cloud has a silver lining!!! (More laughter)
One side of me was saying "Great I don't have to go into work tomorrow" The other side was saying "S**t what am I going to do now? I've been working; cooking; being a chef all this time - what am I going to do?" Going through all that and the press that I had was horrible. The way I got mauled by the press, I lost complete confidence in myself; I couldn't go out; I didn't work for four months but it got to the point where I had to work or else my house was going to be taken away. So I thought "You have got to just brush yourself down and get on out there" so I called up Koffman to see if he needed anyone and he said "yes, come back and work for me""¦
Obviously, you'd worked there; it was two stars when you went there and you were there when he got the third, is that right?
Yes, I worked there in '91 as a Chef de Partie and that's when Gordon (Ramsay) took over the Tante Clare and Pierre (Koffman) moved to The Berkeley. So I went there as his Head Chef and stayed with him there for another 6 - 9 months. It was great to be in a kitchen again and to be in a kitchen where I didn't have to worry about everything that you have to worry about when you are running your own place. I didn't have the pressures of it all. Then I decided that I needed to get out there again; make some more money and decided to go into private work.
Was that Lady Bamford you worked for, wasn't it?
Yes, I worked for Carole Bamford and Andrew Lloyd Webber - it was great; I loved it. You meet all different people. It brought me out of my shell; gave me some real confidence. I met some great contacts and it was nice to do some simple, simple food. Country Estate Cooking, as I call it.
Comfort food?
Yes, it didn't take up much of my time, so I could be a normal human being for a couple of years.
So how did the restaurant come about, Tom? Was it 2004?
2003 and I had been cooking for Carole for about two years and I was getting to the point of being stir crazy. I was getting paid well; great benefits like use of a car and cottage "¦ and I was thinking "Hey, I could get used to this!" (Laughter)
I bet!
And I thought this has got to change because I could see myself getting stuck in a rut and being there for ever. I thought I can't give up after everything that I had been through.
So you were still quite driven by the Michelin thing?
Oh God, yes. They wanted me to stay, which made it even more difficult to leave but I couldn't be a Country Chef for ever - it just wasn't in me. So I started looking, and I started putting a business plan together and we eventually got this site. Did you see the documentary they did on us? Trouble at the top?
No, when was that on?
It gave us unbelievable exposure. They did the series back in early 2000. Well, they wanted to do one on us opening a restaurant so they filmed us nine months prior to us opening this restaurant. When we had finished everything and we were about two months away from opening I had serious doubts; I had a complete f**king meltdown. I had gone from working 18 - 19 hours a day; felling like s**t, having stresses and worries about running your own kitchen/business to this amazing life of cooking what I wanted and having a life "¦ I thought f**king hell you're going back into a world of long hours, stress, dealing with staffing issues - I had a complete wobbler and thought am I really up for this; can I go back to having 5-6 hours sleep a night? And are people going to come into the restaurant? You know, this place cost over £1 million to set up and you need people to come through the doors.
Yes, you need to pay it back somehow.
Luckily, as soon as we opened the doors it was hugely successful. Literally after a month, when all the reviews started to kick in we were full.
And you were the "Darling" of the press again then, weren't you?
Yes, I was "¦ for a short while (Laughter) "¦ "?til I put my foot in it again!
How have you and your cooking style evolved during that period of time?
Hugely,!--nextpage-->