more into date and makes them more modern. So I like what I'm doing at the moment. The main thing for me is just having the best ingredient possible and cooking it perfectly - that's my ethos. So a good ingredient and light touch and you can have something quite special. I think working with chefs throughout your career you take a little bit from everybody and that creates you as a chef."
On The Roux Scholarship: "I've never really done a competition before, I tried the scholarship about two years ago but I didn't get through the paper round. The Roux Scholarship is THE competition in the country and it catapults you up your career so quickly. If you look at the past scholars that won and what they are doing now, you would be mad not to have a go.
"Working for André Garrett who was a Roux Scholar in 2002, I've realised it's not even about the prizes it's just about being The Roux Scholar 2015. And having the guidance of the Roux family for the rest of your career. Cooking for them I was extremely nervous, but the worst part of the day was getting your mystery dessert box and thinking what to do with it - my mind just went blank. I scrapped everything after 25 minutes and started again, I just couldn't make my mind up!
"To prepare for the final I've watched the last five finals on youtube and I've been reading Escoffier and Larousse. Just getting my head into classical techniques, sharpening up on my fish, meat and veg prep. When they say it in French I don't have a clue but when I see it made that's when I realise what it is."
Cooking ambitions: "I'd love to own my own place - I've always wanted a fine dining pub. I'm 29 now and my next aim is to look at becoming a head chef, so I'm pushing as much as I can as a chef and getting my name out there."
>>> We talk to more Roux Scholarship 2015 finalists here