been in here and had the tasting menu twice. Magnus from Faviken has been here, David Chang from Momofuku has been here, Daniel Patterson has been here. Massimo Patano has been here.
Do you take credit from that?
It’s the biggest compliment that I get, is really great people in the world of food and that's writers as well.
Because those guys could go anywhere, in the nicest possible way, couldn’t they? They could eat in any restaurant they wanted to. 
It’s like well what’s happening in England and it’s nice that we're regarded as one of the things whereas of course in England we're always fighting that prejudice and I don’t really mind because I find it quite amusing but we're fighting that prejudice where people think it’s a pub.
You’re full lunch, you’re full dinner, chefs from all around the world are coming, the bloggers know you, you’re on the map but has it always been like that or was there a point in the early days where you thought, “You know what sod it I'm just going to start doing chilli and rice."
No, I’m a self-taught cook so I learnt by going to the great restaurants in London in the early 90s, Nico Ladenis in 1992, I went and had a meal there, it was so good, he had two stars, going on for three, it blew my mind and I thought, I'm going to teach myself how to cook this well, because I was already a good cook and I thought it must be possible. I went to Nico’s, I went three times in one week. I went ten, 12 times overall. I went to Marco Pierre White’s over and over again. I went to Koffman’s a lot, I went to all the Roux Brothers restaurants.
So basically I taught myself to cook by buying a cookbook of somebody, going and eating a dish in their restaurant and then coming back and cooking at home. When we first opened I think something in the back of my
mind told me I was maybe a little bit exceptional, it’s hard to say that because you sound like you're boasting but I think 12 years down the line, the fact is we opened this place in the middle of nowhere with no advertising, we never spent a penny on advertising, no PR, now a lot of people, I know that there's people that think that we've got some kind of PR company and that's why we get written about, well really sorry to say it but the reason we get written about is because we're exceptional.
The Good Food Guide found us, Hardens found us, Michelin found us and with no PR and absolutely no advertising. All the press is organic and natural and the people who, I know there are writers like Diana Henry and Jay Rayner, Tom Parker Bowles who rave about us, it’s all genuine, it’s because they love it and we never asked them for anything.
That's the best recommendation you can get isn’t it is genuine recommendation. Last question for you, you are self-taught we've some wonderful self-taught chefs, Raymond Blanc, being one of them, is that an advantage or a disadvantage and what advice would you give to somebody who’s maybe thinking of embarking on a career as a chef would it be to do some training or just go and do what you did?
It depends on your personality I think that people who make good self-taught chefs are slightly remarkable people because they’ve obviously got some kind of self confidence and sometimes it’s misplaced self confidence because there are some bad self-taught chefs out there I'm sure, we just happen to know that Heston, Raymond Blanc and all these people are exceptional people, I mean they are…
Who would probably excel doing whatever they were going to do.
You know I'm sure Heston (Blumenthal) would be a great debt collector. He'd be brilliant at whatever he does because that's his mindset. So yeah I think being self-taught is great if you’re that type of person and if you've got some chops about you whereby you've got to have confidence and sometimes as I say it’s misplaced and people think they’re good chefs and they’re not and that could have been the case with me and gradually over the years you get a Michelin star and then you get kind of number five in the best restaurants. All of a sudden you’re on this list, you’re in that guide with
All of a sudden you’re on this list, you’re in that guide with top rating and so slowly it’s almost like people are saying to you, “With this award I anoint you a decent chef,” that's good enough for me.
I'm happy with that and I think what we do is quite unique. I like to think that by applying a certain kind of intelligence to what we do and also mixed in with travel and the fact the world is changing, the food world’s changing and maybe people who were brought up in the old school find it quite hard to see the world through a new lens so maybe there are some chefs there who are thinking, ‘Oh shit do I have to read that science book, that's 400 pages long can't I just cook a nice rack of lamb?’ to which my answer is yes just cook the nice rack of lamb.
Well on that note thank you so, so much for today. Thank you.