Chris Underwood is the Pastry Chef at The Five Fields where he serves up his excellent, imaginative desserts using often overlooked ingredients.
In a wide-ranging career Chris has worked as a pastry chef at Gidleigh Park, Pied a Terre, Colettes, L’Ortolan, La Becasse, Hibiscus and Tom Aikens Restaurant before finally moving to The Five Fields where he has total creative control over the pastry and bread sections of the menu, working alongside chef-patron Taylor Bonnyman and head chef Marguerite Keogh.
How does it feel as a pastry chef to have your name on the pastry menu at The Five Fields? Do you find that freedom to create inspiring?
Definitely yes, I have so many ideas and things I want to create but I have to hold back and wait sometimes. I’m working on a strawberry and elderflower dish with red pepper at the moment. I want to do it tomorrow but I can’t because the strawberries aren’t good enough. I’m champing at the bit to do it but I have to restrain myself. I’ve just changed the petits fours because I wanted them to go down a kind of sweet shop route, so I’ve got marshmallow cables, I’ve got salted nougat, I’ve got little sweets wrapped in white chocolate fudge; I’ve got sherbet dib dabs, cherry aid flavour lollipops, peppermint creams, rhubarb and custards.
There’s plenty of scope. I do up a dish, give it to Taylor and Marguerite and 99.9% of the time they love it, which is great. We print our menus out new everyday so we have the flexibility to change something every day, which is great, and also the fact that it’s dinner only means we’ve got all that time to prep and develop stuff and be bang on the money in terms of seasons.
You’re well known for your use of vegetables in desserts; when did you develop that style?
I did a bit at Hibiscus with Claude Bosi and it really rang a bell like, hang on a minute, peas are
naturally sweet, parsnips are naturally sweet, carrots too, but you’re so taken with everything else going on in the pastry world, with chocolate and all that, you never stop to think about vegetables. I really like using vegetables and I think they’re just as important as fruits in desserts. When you think about the process and marriage of flavours, it really works; it’s been working for years but nobody’s really bothered with it.
What’s a new vegetable-based dessert on the menu at the moment?
I’ve got a white chocolate and cucumber dessert on at the moment. It’s with a burnt basil meringue, made from basil that you cook in the oven at 200 degrees until it’s black; you then make it into an ash and fold it through a French meringue; I do that with a white chocolate ganache and a white chocolate and juniper sorbet, so it’s very much like a take on a gin and tonic; then there’s compressed cucumber balls with dill and juniper syrup and also dill oil and a dill powder. I split the dill oil with milk so it makes pearls on the plate; and it’s finished with lots of fresh dill so it’s very clean and really nice in the spring.
What aspects of pastry do you most enjoy?
I do like baking. At work I don’t let anyone else do the bread; it’s just me. I’m very anal about it. I love the act of making it and seeing the final product come from something that