Andy, now in his 15th year as a pastry chef at Michael Caines’ restaurant at Gidleigh Park hotel, tells us about his daily routine, what the future has in store for him and his advice for young chefs. Andy King first and foremost thanks for inviting me down to Gidleigh. Give us an overview of your role here as pastry chef at Gidleigh Park Hotel.
Basically, I oversee the whole department. It’s quite a small team, there's five of us so it’s quite hands-on. I'm in every morning by five o'clock.
Are you really? Yes. Is that for bread and morning goods?
Croissants mainly, and pain au chocolat which we cook fresh daily.
Andy, there's not many places that are still doing morning goods, even very good operations are buying those sort of things in, do you pride yourself on still doing that?
Yes I do and it’s really rewarding, I really enjoy doing it, every day when you take them out of the oven the smell of them just cooked and it’s brilliant, I don’t know any places maybe out of London that actually do that kind of work, apart from obviously the le Manoir. So yes that's the start of my day and then all the biscuit baking, then by about half seven, eight o'clock, I'm making the speciality breads which Michael (Caines) brought to Gidleigh, Michael spent time in a bakery in France, it’s something he's very passionate about. So I spend a good three or four hours making bread then making sure the team are ready for the lunch service, then chocolate work, and during the remainder of the day getting the section ready for the dinner service before I leave the team.
How many menus do you run?
At lunchtime, we have the lunch menu, à la carte menu and our signature menu. For dinner service, we also have the tasting menu.
So how many desserts is that for you?
À la carte five desserts, lunch menu three desserts and a signature menu which includes, pre-dessert and main dessert and then obviously the petit fours on top of that and then for dinner we have the à la carte, the tasting menu which is slightly larger than the à la carte menu but not as big as the signature menu which changes weekly, we also serve hand-made chocolates with dinner.
So talk us through menu changes, how many times do you change the menus and how do you go about it? Do you come up with dishes? Do you work with Michael? How does it work?
We’ve got a good sound repertoire which Michael and I have created over the years.
You've been here 15 years now is that right?
Yes, I have.
So I guess in 15 years you've got quite an extensive recipe bank, haven’t you?
It’s pretty good. So it’s very seasonal. The lunch menu changes weekly so you’ve got four or five weekly menus on a rolling basis through the season. À la carte obviously seasonally changing and the tasting menu changes also. So there's a lot of mise en place to keep on top of at all times.
Are there certain things on the menu you have to have, you've got to have a chocolate dish? I mean are there things that if you took it off you’d have guests saying, “Where’s that gone?”
Yeah one of our dishes on the à la carte, the trio of chocolate is probably Michael’s signature dessert. That's been on the menu pretty much from when we created it a number of years ago until now and there's always a soufflé on the menu, whether it be raspberry in the summer, prune and Armagnac in the winter, or pistachio, or orange and Grand Marnier. I think the guests kind of expect that really and then obviously in the winter we’ll have an apple tart. That runs all through the cox apple season and then obviously this time of the year we’ve got an abundance of berries locally.
Is this as a pastry chef the season where everything comes alive for you?
Yes it is, I can't wait for the arrival of April, May, June. After a long winter you can't wait for the forced rhubarb season to come in, personally I don't like rhubarb, myself and Michael and I have got a standing joke about my dislike for rhubarb but it’s a great commodity to be able to cook. As soon as the berries are coming in, you've got apricots, peaches, and cherries. It’s just a fantastic time of year and we’ve got a fantastic garden here at the hotel which our gardener who especially just grows what we ask him to grow.
How has your role and the pastry department developed and adapted over that 15 years? Were you baking bread, making Danishes, croissants, when you first came 15 years ago?
Michael trained me up back then. When I came for my interview he said, “We make croissants and pain au chocolates daily,” I was like “oh flipping heck” but I learnt quickly how to make those. When I first arrived, the whole kitchen was a lot more basic than it is now, there's