see it evolving in the future?
I don’t think it was ever ‘molecular’. I think chefs are really starting to understand how their base product has developed. Chefs now have a better understanding of what it takes to produce cuisine, so we can be more exact when we’re poaching an egg or when we’re cooking beef.
It’s relevant today and it will still be relevant in 20 years. Ferran, and people like him, have opened the gateways to a whole new way of thinking. Even if I opened a bistro, I would use those techniques in bistro cooking as they enable me to become more exact. Customers become more demanding as the years go by, so we have to up our game.
The concept of Pollen St Social is social eating. Can fine dining really stay true to the concept of sharing or is it restricted by the formalities of Michelin dining?
My philosophy in life is this: There is good food and there is bad food. I’ve eaten all over the world and I’ve had bad meals, so I’ve eaten bad food. It’s just bad food; it doesn’t matter what it’s dressed up as.
I’ve been to a beautiful steak restaurant in Italy by
Dario Cecchini. All this guy does is crudités as a starter – the vegetables are gro

wn in the garden. He washes them, puts them in a basket with garlic mayonnaise and that’s it. You break them and you eat them, while he’s cooking this Florentine steak from his own cattle. He serves with it tempura ceps and artichokes. That’s it. It’s just delicious. So that’s great food.
It doesn’t matter if it’s three star, one star or no stars; if it’s good food, it’s good food. I remember Michelin telling me a long time ago, ‘The more you serve us, the more we will judge you on. Keep it simple.’ And they’re right, so we keep it simple.
You celebrate the skill of the pastry chef with the dessert bar at Pollen St Social. Why do you feel pastry chefs are so undervalued in the UK?
All my pastry chefs play a prominent part. I’m looking for a site in Asia at the moment for my executive pastry chef, Andres Lara. He is singularly, the most talented pastry chef I have ever worked with in my entire life. This guy is so goddamn cool; I love him to death. He’s ex-
noma, ex-El Bulli, ex-Alinea, which all speaks for itself. He does all the pastry menus in the group, but his dream is to open his own pastry venue and I will help him realise his dream.
You can never, ever undervalue the pastry chef. The last bite of the main course can be sublime, but if the desserts are no good then it’s worth nothing. Your standard has to run all the way through the menu. Pastry chefs are absolutely paramount.
What trends do you predict with regards to flavours and cooking techniques for this year and will any of those influence what you are doing at Pollen St Social?
I don’t like to predict the future; I’m not Mystic Meg – I just cook my food. I let my fo

od naturally evolve; if I see something new and exciting I will have a look, but it won’t influence my food. It’s really important that your food stays true to its original roots. But, I’m always looking for something new to see where our food can change. At the same time, we don’t bastardise our food.
I have to look at it from a restaurateur’s point of view. My favourite tailor is Spencer Hart. I know his suits are clean cut: it is very
Mad Men, very slim lapel and I love that look. If I go in and he’s changed it to flared trousers, a wide lapel then I’d be like ‘what’s going on?’ I don’t want that; I’ve come to spend my money on your suit and now your dressing me like a 70s rock star. It’s the same with food: you have to build trust with your customer. I don’t go off on tangents about influence from this or I went to eat there, but it is important to pay attention and keep your food up with the times though not in a crazy way.
What is your favourite menu season and why?
Spring. It’s a beautiful time of the year and it’s very inspirational. Some beautiful ingredients come back into the kitchen: asparagus, wild garlic, spring lamb and the little sardines start showing their faces.
See Jason's recipe for mackerel tartare here
See Jason's recipe for vanilla cheesecake, rhubarb and ginger here