lot of events and it never feels like a routine. The seven years I spent at Le Bristol to me feel like two years.
Monsieur Frechon is one of the best professionals I’ve ever met in my life. He was in the kitchen at eight o’clock in the morning and left at eleven o’clock or midnight. I’d never seen anyone before so intense in their work.
From there you moved to Greece to head up Spondi; how did that come about and was it a difficult decision to leave somewhere you loved so much?
It wasn’t difficult because there comes a time when you want to be your own chef. I met the owner of Spondi [Apostolos Trastelis]because monsieur Frechon was a consultant chef for the restaurant; at the same time the owner of Spondi was looking for a new head chef. I met him at Le Bristol and then I went to Athens to see the restaurant and I fell in love with it.
You took Spondi from a one-star restaurant to Greece’s only two-star restaurant; was that something you were working consciously towards?
I was working for the happiness of the guests, to try and continually be better for them; I believe that when you work in this way good things happen like the second Michelin star. Actually it was the owner’s dream to get three Michelin stars but that dream was killed by the economic crisis in Greece.

It was really sad because the owner spent a lot of money on the restaurant over five or six years but when the crisis hit, the number of guests started to go down and this had an impact on the quality of product that we had to work with.
Was this when you decided to move on and found your current position at The Greenhouse?
For one year I was wondering whether I should stay or go. It was quite a difficult decision to take because starting at a new place is very difficult when you are already working somewhere with two stars because you have to work very hard to build it up from the start again; but after making the decision I started to look for a new place. I met Marlon Abela, the owner of the MARC [Marlon Abela Restaurant Corporation, which The Greenhouse is part of]when I came to London to visit the restaurant and it was a very good opportunity to have a new challenge.
What’s the next goal for you and The Greenhouse? A third star?
Yes, because I believe that when you start something like this and you get one Michelin star and then two,

you have to keep going for the top and try to get three; this will push us to be better every day and continue to deliver excellence, and it’s a great opportunity to bring something extra to the guests. I don’t have the recipe for a third Michelin star but it just helps to push you forward to always try to be better for the guests.
Would you like to have your own restaurant one day with your own name above the door?
No, I prefer to work for someone else and do what I want to do, to be my own chef. It’s not so easy to be a chef and owner – you have so many more problems to deal with; so no, it’s not a dream for me. I like to focus on cooking and leave business problems to the owner.
View Arnaud's recipe for Pan fried Foie gras,Fennel Pollen, Prune,Cocoa nibs
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