my heart and soul into it but the mistake I made was that I didn’t know enough about the business and that side of operating a restaurant. I could cook, I could deliver the food and look after the team in the kitchen. If I knew then what I know now about business then that place would still be open and it would be a huge success. I put a lot of trust in people to look after me and the business and unfortunately that didn’t happen.
I knew at the time it may close but I didn’t know they had actually closed it until my restaurant manager texted me to tell me. I was in London as I had moved away to give the business breathing space, so it didn’t have to pay me a wage. It was sad when it closed and when I moved back to London people said to me ‘you have to get over it, restaurants close – these things happen and you can’t always control it’. I feel for the people who were all involved, particularly the staff, who did get let down, because you never intend to go out and do any of that and I did try and make amends to the best of my ability.
I read the stuff on the internet about it and these people don’t know the full story, it wasn’t all that it seemed and unfortunately it’s easy to throw mud when you are 12,000 miles away.
You’re part Italian, has food always been part of your life?
Yes, we’re a family with an Italian background but I was born and raised in Sheffield. I grew up around pub style food and I always wanted to be a chef. I did three years at college for both cheffing and restaurant management, as I believe a good chef has to understand what’s going on front of house. Chefs can be very insular and shout from the kitchen but they have no idea what’s going on front of house.
You’ve worked with some great chefs, have they influenced your style or do you have a style of your own?
I’d like to say I have my own style but I also believe chefs are always watching each other, looking at new trends, new openings. That’s how we learn new techniques for ourselves. It’s different with STK as that’s a brand I have to work with and follow.
The days of working at Conran’s Le Pont de la Tour was all about simplicity. I was there in its heyday and it was three or four components on a plate. It was really simple but done really well – the flavours spoke for themselves.

Then I was with Marco Pierre White and obviously that was the other end of the spectrum. It was Michelin star dining, it was about technique right to the finish. Michelin star dining then to what it is now is almost two extremes. What you see in the old books of Marco when I was with him was four or five components max, very simply done on a plate but the sauce and all of those pieces – they were perfect. Finesse is what I learnt from Marco and the fine points needed to make the dish perfect and at Conran I learnt simplicity and I found that somewhere between the two worked for me.
You talk about chefs you’ve worked with and the experiences you gained but do you have a kitchen which was your favourite to work in?
I think there are two. Le Pont de la Tour under David Burke and Les Saveurs where I was working alongside Gary Hollihead. At Les Saveurs we were doing 40 to 50 covers on a Friday and a Saturday night but it was Michelin star dining so it was a stressful night but I loved that.
I was young and energetic enough to enjoy the pressure – at that time for me it was all about work, still is to a degree. You thrive off the pressure – yeah sometimes you have really shit days, and nothing seems to go right, even now, but you get up the next morning and walk into the kitchen and think today is going to be a good day.
What are your plans for the future and The ONE Group?
Opportunities arise all the time and it’s got to be the right opportunity for me. I’ve got no urge right now to leave The ONE Group. We’ve got a rapid growth plan over the next year and eight openings so there’s going to be a lot on with lots of interesting challenges.

They are a fun company, with a great vision and they understand the industry. There is travel involved with my job being a global company, we have some fantastic people working with us and that is what makes it so great, the people!
Do you have a favourite dish you’ve brought into the group or is that an impossible question?
It is a difficult one but I will say I’ve always been a massive advocate of British beef, and it’s not because I’m now working for an American company as I would use it if I didn’t, but I now buy USDA beef. It’s tender, it’s flavoursome – it’s just a whole new level of beef. You have to try it!