your face all day, it’s unbelievable.
Did you enjoy being pushed out of your comfort zone?
GBM is very enjoyable; I wouldn’t do it if I didn’t enjoy it. It’s a competition so you’re living on adrenalin. From that point of view, it’s good fun. You work with some good guys in the kitchen. It’s a bit different from the day job. There is massive pressure to get it right and things do go wrong, but that’s just a part of the show. If it went swimmingly well, then it would be boring.
How difficult was it to cook in the Great British Menu kitchen alongside other chefs?
You are under strict time constraints. Try to do too much and then you’ll run out of time – nightmare! The kitchen’s hot, things work differently in the GBM kitchen, the oven is different, so you’re working with equipment that’s not quite the same. You are under pressure because people are watching you all day. It’s frustrating because you only got one chance. You can’t start again because if you’re not up for the task on time, they’ll chuck you out.
Best and worst part of being on the Great British Menu?
The best part is the adrenaline you get from it, and working with a bunch of other chefs is so much fun. The worst part is what you do is being scrutinised in front of millions of people on TV.
Would you do it again?
Yeah! When somebody’s saying that they’ll put you on TV, give you good exposure, it’s good for business, you can’t really say no. It doesn’t happen every day so you’ve got to enjoy it. Use it as an experience, you know?
If you were scoring your dishes would you agree with what your judge said or not? If not why not?
I got four tens so I’d definitely agree with the judge. That was absolute bullshit – I just said that because I like saying it! I agree with the judges; they know what they’re doing and what they’re talking about.
How nerve-wracking was it to cook for your peers?
It’s always nerve-wracking but it’s good fun. Not that nerve-wrecking really, you just get on with it and believe in what you’re trying to do and make sure it’s right.