The Staff Canteen Meets ...
Andre Garrett : Head Chef : Galvin at Windows : Hilton Park Lane London
Andre Garrett is head chef of Galvin at Windows, Chris Galvin’s Michelin starred London restaurant located on the 28th floor of the Park Lane Hilton in Mayfair. The restaurant serves seasonally inspired menus based around modern French haute cuisine. It opened in 2006 and won a Michelin star in 2010. Andre Garrett trained at the City of Bath College, after working at a Bath hotel, he moved to London where he worked at three of Nico Ladenis’s restaurants: Simply Nico, Nico Central and the three Michelin starred Chez Nico at 90 Park Lane. He joined Bruno Loubet at Bistro Bruno before returning to Nico Central, this time as head chef. He was sous chef at the five star Landmark Hotel in London followed by senior sous chef at Moxons Restaurant in Clapham. In 2000 he met Chris Galvin, where he joined him at the Michelin starred Orrery in Marylebone where he moved from senior sous chef to head chef in the space of a year. In 2002 he won the prestigious Roux scholarship, working at the Michelin starred Guy Savoy, Paris, before returning to the Orrery until he took his current position at the opening of Galvin at Windows.
First and foremost thank you very much for your time today lovely to come and meet you"
Thank you very much for coming.
..and to observe this absolutely outstanding view.
Yes it's pretty special.
I can imagine sometimes in the stress of the kitchen it must be just nice to come out here and a few deep breaths and admire the view.
Yes well we're very lucky we have this back balcony here which is outside so we've got a kitchen door on the other side it's a fire exit so you can go out there and if I have any time I need to have a little quiet word with anyone that's where I take them.
Oh you threaten to throw them off do you? ((laughs))
No not that much no but you can also just calm yourself down because you look at that and you think, "˜This is bloody special, this is a very special place to cook, a very special place to work.'
Absolutely actually we've kind of done this the wrong way round really we're talking about someone and we haven't introduced you yet. Andre introduce yourself, tell us a little about your role here, the number of covers you do, how long you've been here, the number of boys in your team, or the number in your team, food style, that type of thing, just general background.
Sure I'm Andre Garrett and I'm head chef here at Galvins at Windows. We opened in May 2006 and I came with Chris (Galvin) from the Orrery Restaurant. It was a very, very busy opening, extremely busy from day one and we've never really gone quiet. Even through the recession we've been very proactive in what we've done. Covers-wise we have a restaurant which has 100 seats"
It's big isn't it bigger than I thought?
Yes it's very, very big. So we can be doing anything up to about 150.
Wow. And that's lunch and dinner Andre?
No, no. Lunches through the year I would say we're doing about an average 60 lunch and then we're doing about an average 120 dinner.
London's fiercely competitive market for lunch isn't it?
Yeah extremely competitive we've had to really look at what we do over the four and a half years we've been open. We've had to really look at what we do, price range, what you're giving to people, people are now looking for much more value, you know, still keeping very seasonal, still keeping modern French, is what our cuisine is here and yeah it's very good and everything's going well.
Good, good and in terms of food style, you mentioned it's modern French is that how you would describe the food style? What can people expect from a typical meal at Galvins?
I would say there's still quite a classical emphasis on the food but there's much more of a modern, lighter style to it. I'm a chef that's very classically trained. I trained with Nico and I like things to be done properly but obviously we've got a modern kitchen we've got a lot of much more modern techniques you have to work, staffing can't always be perfect so you need to balance your menu accordingly and I think we do it quite well.
And how many menus do you offer here?
We have our Menu Prestige which is what people call a la carte and we have our lunch menu and then we have a tasting menu that runs alongside that.
And what are the prices for the menus here at Window Andre?
Lunch menu is £29 for three course
That's good value isn't it?
prestige is £65 for three course and tasting menu is £85 for eight course.
Right okay. And in terms of your menus how often do you change them is it seasonal?
Yeah the prestige menu and the tasting is seasonal and then the lunch menu is changed every two weeks.
What dish would you say on your current menu best describes you as a chef if you could pick one dish that is Andre Garret?
Yeah I would say probably my, I have a John Dory dish which has been with me for years now, south coast John Dory which is marinated in a little curry oil, it's got caramelised endive, cauliflower purée and then a dressing made with curry oil and golden raisins, capers, pine nuts and it's got a very like reduced shellfish bisque in there to give it quite an umami hit at the end. Lovely.
Yes, it's a good dish.
Well it certainly sounds a great dish.
It's very, very nice.
And some quite sort of strong Asian influences in there as well.
A little bit not too much there's just a few sort of flavour pinpoints and flavours, and I do like Asian food but I wouldn't say I cook Asian at all, you know, it's not really what I would do but I"
Are you finding the world's getting a smaller place and therefore people are much more, you know, 20 years ago if you had something with a curry spice in it, it was quite revolutionary and now it's quite"
Yes people would of said, "Oh he's quite brave,"
Yeah outside of an Indian restaurant you didn't really get that, you know, the sort of blend of herbs and spices and flavours that chefs like yourself are using today.
I think as chefs you love to travel, you love to see, you know, the world is getting smaller we can travel so easily and I think also in French cuisine if I look back they have always taken things from all round the world, taken influences and blended it into their own culture and into their own cuisine as well and I think it's just an extension of that.
London is a food Mecca, not just for the UK but also now for the world it really has taken centre stage where do you look in London for inspiration? Who inspires you chef-wise, hotel-wise, restaurant-wise or even outside London?
Yeah I mean no London is fantastic we have such a diverse culture of food. There are so many things to look at. If I was to look at French, you know, I've got haute cuisine I would go to the Ledbury (Brett Graham) or the Hibiscus (Claude Bosi) or the Square (Phil Howard) is an old favourite of mine. Asian food I mean you just drop down into Soho and you've got lovely sushi bars and everything. I also like my tapas, I like my barrafina and all that sort of thing. I love Italian as well. My girlfriend's Italian so, you know, we have"
Do we do Italian well in the UK?
Yeah but I think the Italians have to do it and being with an Italian I understand Italian food much better now"
Because sadly it's
I've started to travel there and it's very, very interesting.
It's very different in Italy though and sadly we still have a"¦pizza and pasta mentality
Very much.
or Italian restaurants don't we?
I love what Georgio Locatelli does
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