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Karl Goward is head chef at Adam Byatt’s Clapham neighbourhood restaurant, Bistro Union. With more than twenty years in the industry, Karl has worked in some iconic restaurants such as Fergus Henderson’s St John and Gabrielle Hamilton’s Prune in New York. He has also opened, set up and run a host of operations like St John Bread and Wine, Fergus Henderson’s second St John opening, and The Drapers Arms in Islington.
Within two years at the helm at Bistro Union, 40-year-old Karl has already earned it a Michelin Bib Gourmand and a place in Timeout’s top 50 London restaurants list. How would describe the food style at Bistro Union?
It’s based around good seasonal British ingredients, well-sourced and treated with a bit of respect. We try and let the quality of the produce speak for itself rather than mask it with too many sauces or do too much to it. If it’s a beautiful, fresh piece of fish, we’ll just put some braised leeks and a blob of aioli with it, rather than make a mousse out of it or wrap it anything, just let it speak for itself and that’s the same whether it’s a beautiful head of Brussels tops or a quail or a bit of sea bass; we treat them all with respect.
How would you say Bistro Union differs from Trinity?
I would say there’s quite a considerable difference. We always look at Trinity as being slightly more formal. I think they’re more in that sort of Michelin star territory. We’ve got a Bib Gourmand which is the level I’ve always cooked at. The price range is different; you don’t have a huge amount of linen; you don’t have a huge amount of staff, but the food is excellent and good value for money. So it’s in that list, which has on it St John Bread and Wine, which I opened and set up; Drapers Arms, which I opened and set up and places like Hereford Road, Anchor and Hope, those places where you can get a really fantastic meal but the food is – I hate to use the word ‘simple’ because people get the wrong end of the stick – but a little less
complicated maybe.
How does the process of menu and dish creation work between you and Adam?
Menu creation comes pretty much wholly from here. We try and get people involved and pitching in ideas and ingredients they’d like to work with or haven’t used before, and try and make that work within our style. It’s ninety percent driven by my repertoire but I like to think other people have an input; it keeps people interested and gives them a personal interest in the things they’re creating; they take that little bit of extra pride in what they’re doing.
It’s very much a neighbourhood restaurant; do you feel you’ve integrated well into the local community?
Unlike a lot of places, we haven’t just landed here; we’ve tried to integrate into the area and be a part of it and