The chef, 52, on teenage cook’s tunnel vision, learning to say thank you to his staff and cooking egg tarts for the Queen, which thankfully she liked

Dad was always absent at home, he had no work-life balance. It gave me a work ethic like you wouldn’t believe as a student and worker. But I vowed that if I ever brought children into the world, I would be part of their lives. Dad retired, turned around, and found his kids were grown up. I never wanted that realisation.

As a child I was shy, a loner who did his own thing. I went to catering college, worked hard and flourished. Through my teenage years I pushed everyone away. I focused only on my cooking. I was selfish and self-centred; pubs, clubs and socialising felt like a distraction.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

The economic challenges facing Liz Truss, in four charts

Topmost in the new prime minister’s in-tray will be energy bills, wholesale…

NHL All-Star Skills Competition

nhl skills competition 2023

The Voice winner 2020

winner of the voice 2020, voice winner 2020

Jeremy Hunt set to outline £60bn in tax rises and spending cuts

Guardian understands early drafts of UK government’s autumn statement include at least…