of it; we’re not that sort of restaurant.
Did you enjoy being pushed out of your comfort zone, and how difficult was it to cook in the Great British Menu kitchen alongside other chefs?
You’re in a foreign kitchen, cooking with other chefs… There’s an element of jeopardy. We don’t necessarily get that in a day-to-day basis in a restaurant. But it’s exciting, I mean that’s why we do it. Cooking with others was no more difficult than it has been in previous years. In the regionals, I’ve been up against two new contestants, Nick Brodie and Paul Croasdale, so I had the advantage in the GBM kitchen. But yeah, it’s not my kitchen. Nick is a crazy guy; he’s very on the edge, really super cool guy, really talented cook. I knew Paul anyway, I worked with him. Paul was my head chef at Berners Tavern for over a year, so it was quite amusing going up against him.
Best and worst part of being on Great British Menu?
I think the best part is meeting new chefs, taking part in the show, having a good laugh. The worst part is probably the food they give us at lunch-time.
Would you do it again?
Probably. I don’t know, but I probably would if they called me.
If you were scoring your dishes would you agree with what your judge said or not? If not, why not?
Yeah! I mean I got pretty high scores from my veteran judge, so yeah, I’d agree with him.
How nerve-wracking was it to cook for your peers?
It’s always nerve-wracking, even though I know Paul and I sort of know Nick, I don’t really know what their style of cooking was. Anything could happen. It’s nerve-wracking being judged against anybody but that’s part of the excitement of doing Great British Menu, to see where you stand against other chefs.