chefs to cook alongside Alyn; how is that going?
Yes, each Tuesday this month we have a different chef in the kitchen. We’ve already had
Sat Bains which was amazing. He came down on the Monday with a handful of his briga

de and we all mucked in to create an eight course tasting menu with four dishes each from Sat and Alyn which complimented each other. It was the first time I’d met Sat; he’s a great character and his food’s lovely too. I’m really looking forward to working with Simon Rogan in two weeks’ time but I’m also very interested in working with the two international chefs, Iggy Chan and Bart de Pooter, because I’ve never tried their food before and it will be really interesting to see how they work.
Last year you won a Michelin star, three AA rosettes, Alyn won the National Chef of the Year competition and you came 15th in the National Restaurant of the Year in a relatively short space of time; what was it like to be here during that period?
All four of those achievements were great. I think personally for Alyn the National Chef of the Year award was an amazing accomplishment but also of course getting the star. After leaving Marcus Wareing and setting out on his own for him to get the star that quickly was a huge success.
What is Alyn like to work for?
Great, the expectation is there that everyone is expected to work really hard but it’s more about building a good team around him rather than just working people like dogs so they’re nervous wrecks. You want people to leave your brigade stronger as cooks and stronger in character, not as weak, meek, nervous kids who are frightened to touch a carrot because they might get barked at; that’s ridiculous.
How has Alyn influenced you as a chef since you’ve been here?
Everyone I’ve worked with has given me something. I’ve been very lucky to work with so many great chefs and they’ve all contributed in their own way. Personally I think Alyn will be the last person I work under. He’s kind of polished me up a little bit and

made me realise that I’m ready to do it on my own. I think what will stay with me from what Alyn has shown me is how he wants his kitchen run, how he treats the ingredients and how he deals with his suppliers – that personal bond that you have with growers and breeders which enables you to do what you want and is kind of priceless really.
You say that Alyn will be the last person you work under; does that mean you’ll be opening your own place soon?
I’d obviously like to run my own place one day but I don’t know when. It’s all about opportunity. Who knows, maybe Alyn will help me, you never know!
View the recipe’s here:-
Devon ruby red sirloin and cheek
Orkney scallop
Strawberry Sundae