they then built a big function suite.
So it was always evolving and I was very comfortable there because I'd been there so long it was just it became quite hard to leave but at that time I had gone through a divorce and I just sort of took a long hard look at myself in the mirror and thought, "Well is there more to life than this? I'm on a good wage and I've got an easy life but I want to be more than that so let's go away and sort it if I'm going to do this for the rest of my life".
You went to London didn't you?
Yeah that's right I went in between the Botleigh I did leave for a little bit and I went to the Lanesborough for a year and a bit.
Why the Lanesborough?
I had a friend who was already working there from the connection through Southampton College and he said it was a great place so I went up and
it was such a fantastic experience but I was living in London in Dulwich and I just never really settled and it just wasn't for me, I'm a country boy at heart.
And there's no in between?
I had a good time there and I did learn a load but I never really settled and so I came back to Botleigh and went back as sous chef and eventually got promoted to head chef. But then I decided right if I'm going to do this properly I'm going to go and find a Michelin=star kitchen, go and work my arse off and see what happens. So I applied to Monsieur Max.
Why there? Any specific reason behind that?
I'd eaten there and really enjoyed it. There was a fantastic kind of ambience in there. It was a real old, quaint kind of French themed building and that and I just liked what I ate there.
Had you applied anywhere else or was Monsieur Max the only place?
No that was the first place to be honest but I went up there and I just had a fantastic day. It was just like I did a stage and I liked them, they liked me and I just liked what was going on. It was a manic kitchen, it was a real eye-opener.
It's quite a low profile place as well and you didn't tend to read a lot about it in the press.
Yeah, it's shut down now I mean it was 2004, I believe it closed down? So I did just over a year there and again I felt, because I was living in Southampton at the time, and still driving up every day, I really didn't want to move up to London again as it was literally one end of the M3 to the other; so it was a manageable drive.
But after a year of it I got a little bit tired and I just felt, not that I'd learnt all I could learn there that's not the right thing to say, but I was just itching to go and do something for myself and I just thought, "Right I'm kind of not ready but I just want to go and do my own thing."
Did you have a mental picture of what the right place was?
I definitely wanted something fairly small and intimate that I take real control of and sort of express myself really, in a good way. So coming across West Stoke House was fantastic, it was kind of at the end of the process it was getting to like definitely six months in to looking and I was like am I going to find something?
Were you taking inspiration from other chefs?
Yeah I mean I was going out and eating a lot and obviously just buying books and stuff.
So who would you say would inspire you as a chef?
I mean obviously the big guys, the main inspiration was Thomas Keller who is just an amazing, amazing chef and obviously from when I was growing up I mean there was Marco (Pierre White), I mean he's just a legend.
So what was the last cookbook you bought?
It was the
Noma book, that will blow your mind. I'm not sure I'll be attempting too much out of there but it's an incredible book.
How would you describe Darren Brown's food style, how would you sum it up?
I think the cliché is just like modern English I suppose. I don't know really.
I try and use stuff that's local, try and keep things seasonal and you don't want to be using stuff way out of season.
So therefore just by basically doing those things you are already doing an English kind of food because if you're using stuff within the English seasons you're automatically doing it. We obviously do the classics and because we're open Sundays we do a lot of Sunday lunch, big roasts all the trimmings, and we've just tried not to go too mad and too funky dunky because obviously the clientele down in Sussex is not the youngest; so you've got to cook for your audience at the end of the day.
You're now part of a very well publicised group so what do you hope to get out of the Restaurant Angélique but also do you want from Alan Murchison Restaurants, what do you want to achieve in the next five years?
I'm not going to lie I'd love a star that's obviously why I came, but it's again to learn, like I've said I've done most of my learning on my own and just the chance to learn off someone like Alan and the way they do things in different kitchens.
I've spent some time with
Will at La Bécasse and obviously down at
L'Ortolan, I've done a week there as well, so just meeting those guys and seeing how they do things has been really inspirational.
I'm going to get a lot of support from Alan, we're going to start with his style mainly, just to get the ball rolling and then gradually over time we'll become more and more my own. I'll take more ownership as the weeks and months and years go by. So we'll be good but it's just at the end of the day I want this place to be successful.
And there's nothing wrong with that.
No, I'm not in it for the fame and fortune I just love cooking and I just want to do it right and I just want a full restaurant that's the best compliment you could ever have. If this place could become really busy and get back to the reputation it had before and, you know, a really positive influence on Dartmouth.