approach that I’ve gained through my travels. I love to travel, but London is a place I really, really like.
Are you working on getting back the star that the restaurant lost last year?
Of course we are, but losing the star for a restaurant does not mean we did something wrong. Sometimes it can be a wake-up call, but we are not doing our job in order to gain stars, we are doing it because we are passionate and we want to make our customers happy. If we can get a star then that’s a plus, yes, but it’s not the first goal. The most important aim is to really please our customers and, if they come back, this is the most important thing and it proves that we have done a good job.
So what are your plans for L’Atelier? What are you looking to do in the future?
Right now we are just passionate about continuing to make great food, to keep looking for new and different ingredients and to continue to keep bettering what we do.
What would you say your cooking style is?
Because of my travelling, it’s very international. I was born in the South of France, so my approach is more about that, but I still have an Asian influence amongst many others.
Do you have a favourite dish on the menu, or what best shows your cooking style?
Yes, there’s a gyoza which I think really reflects my cooking style. Gyoza is a crispy ravioli that you cook on the stove. It’s Asian, but it starts with veal shank that’s cooked in a style from the South of France, with a lot of tomatoes and other ingredients.
What’s the rest of the menu like? How would you describe it to people?
It’s French, but Asian-influenced. We’re a big brand that’s all over the world, and that’s a good thing because we can collate ideas from everywhere. Also we talk all the time with the other chefs, like, “oh, you have something new”, so it’s a big and ongoing exchange. We always have a French basis with French technique, but we’re open to everything, because it’s a world market - even if you don’t travel, if you go to London and go from one street to the other, you’ve changed countries straightaway.
You mentioned the other chefs, but what influence does Joel himself have on the business?
We have signature dishes that we never change – a few, not a lot. At the end of the day, it’s his restaurant, not mine – around 70% is his, and around 30% is mine to do whatever I want. But I’ve been with him for fourteen years and so I think along the same lines as him. I would never do something he wouldn’t agree with.
You’re also part of the Slow Food UK movement; what made you want to join that?
The Slow Food movement is a great cause. It’s very nice because we can help raise awareness of small farmers by working with them. For me it’s a real privilege to work with these farmers as we can find different products that have been produced by people who work with their heart. They give us very special products and we help them as well. Without them, we can’t exist and we really to show them that we appreciate that.
The movement looks at ‘forgotten’ foods, are there are any ‘forgotten’ foods that you would like to see come back?
I like the roots. In winter you have a lot of root vegetables like panais [English: parsnip]. In difficult situations like the war, people were only eating the roots, but after the war, when people started to waste more food, they forgot about them. So I love those, and it’s always nice to take something that people don’t use a lot and then create something very special with it.
Do you have a dish that uses roots?
Yes, we do lobster with root vegetables underneath, a chestnut emulsion and a little bit of cardamom on top.
Would you encourage all chefs to be part of the Slow Food movement?
It’s a nice thing. We give, we receive – it’s a win-win situation, and it’s nice for those small farmers to have exposure and to be able to showcase their products and their love for them.
What do you think of the standard of food in the UK at the moment?
I think it’s growing every day. Competition is very intense, so everybody wants to be better every day. As I said, all the big names are here and all the awards have their eyes on London. Also London is so cosmopolitan; everybody is travelling and coming into London, there’s a big business and the culinary scene is very good compared to other places in Europe. People want to eat well and healthily. London is becoming the culinary platform for Europe.