What should I do or not do when I am eating in Britain?

The British generally pay a lot of attention to good table manners. Even young children are expected to eat properly with knife and fork.

We eat most of our food with cutlery. The foods we don't eat with a knife, fork or spoon include sandwiches, crisps, corn on the cob, and fruit.

Things you should do:

If you cannot eat a certain type of food or have some special needs, tell your host several days before the dinner party.

If you are a guest, it is polite to wait until your host starts eating or indicates you should do so. It shows consideration.

Always chew and swallow all the food in your mouth before taking more or taking a drink.

You may eat chicken and pizza with your fingers if you are at a barbecue, finger buffet or very informal setting. Otherwise always use a knife and fork.

Always say thank you when served something. It shows appreciation.

When eating rolls, break off a piece of bread before buttering. Eating it whole looks tacky.

When eating soup, tip the bowl away from you and scoop the soup up with your spoon.

When you have finished eating, and to let others know that you have,
place your knife and folk together, with the prongs (tines) on the fork facing upwards, on your plate.

In a restaurant, it is normal to pay for your food by putting your money on the plate the bill comes on.

Things you should not do:

Never lick or put your knife in your mouth.

It is impolite to start eating before everyone has been served unless your host says that you don't need to wait.

Never chew with your mouth open. No one wants to see food being chewed or hearing it being chomped on.

It is impolite to have your elbows on the table while you are eating.

Don't reach over someone's plate for something, ask for the item to be passed.

Never talk with food in your mouth.

It is impolite to put too much food in your mouth.

Never use your fingers to push food onto your spoon or fork.

It is impolite to slurp your food or eat noisily.

Never blow your nose on a napkin (serviette). Napkins are for dabbing your lips and only for that.

Never take food from your neighbours plate.

Never pick food out of your teeth with your fingernails.

Things that are ok to do:

It is ok to eat and drink something while walking down the street, unless you want to seem posh.

It is ok to pour your own drink when eating with other people, but it is more polite to offer pouring drinks to the people sitting on either side of you.

It is ok to put milk and sugar in your tea and coffee or to drink them both without either.

If you are eating at a formal dinner party, you will come across many knives and forks. Start with the utensils on the outside and work your way inward with each subsequent course

How to eat with a knife and fork in England

The fork is held in the left hand and the knife in the right.

If you have a knife in one hand, it is wrong to have a fork in the other with the prongs (tines) pointed up.

Hold your knife with the handle in your palm and your folk in the other hand with the prongs pointing downwards.

When eating in formal situations, rest the fork and knife on the plate between mouthfuls, or for a break for conversation.

If you put your knife down, you can turn your fork over. It's correct to change hands when you do this, too, so if you are right handed you would switch and eat with the fork in your right hand.

If it is your sole eating instrument, the fork should be held with the handle between the index finger and the thumb and resting on the side of your middle finger.

How to eat peas

To be very polite, peas should be crushed onto the fork - a fork with the prongs pointing down. The best way is to have load the fork with something to which they will stick, such as potato or a soft vegetable that squashes easily onto the fork. It's sometimes easier to put down your knife and then switch your fork to the other hand, so you can shovel the peas against something else on the plate, thus ensuring they end up on your fork.

How to eat pudding (desserts)

To eat dessert, break the dessert with the spoon, one bite at a time. Push the food with the fork (optional) into the spoon. Eat from the spoon. (Fork in left hand; spoon in right.)

How to use a napkin or serviette

The golden rule is that a napkin should never be used to blow your nose on.

This is a definite no-no. Napkins should be placed across the lap - tucking them into your clothing may be considered 'common'.

Afternoon Tea and High Tea in England

AFTERNOON TEA (The traditional 4 o'clock tea)

This is a small meal, not a drink. Traditionally it consists of tea (or coffee) served with either of the following:

Freshly baked scones served with cream and jam (Known as a cream tea)

Afternoon tea sandwiches - thinly sliced cucumber sandwiches with the crusts cut off.

Assorted pastries

Afternoon tea is not common these days because most adults go out to work. However, you can still have Afternoon tea at the many tea rooms around England.

Afternoon tea became popular about one hundred and fifty years ago, when rich ladies invited their friends to their houses for an afternoon cup of tea. They started offering their visitors sandwiches and cakes too. Soon everyone was enjoying Afternoon tea.

HIGH TEA (The traditional 6 o'clock tea)

The British working population did not have Afternoon Tea. They had a meal about midday, and a meal after work, between five and seven o'clock. This meal was called 'high tea' or just 'tea'.

(Today, most people refer to the evening meal as dinner or supper.)

Traditionally eaten early evening, High tea was a substantial meal that combined delicious sweet foods, such as scones, cakes, buns or tea breads, with tempting savouries, such as cheese on toast, toasted crumpets, cold meats and pickles or poached eggs on toast. This meal is now often replaced with a supper due to people eating their main meal in the evenings rather than at midday.

Puddings and Cakes in England

There are hundreds of variations of sweet puddings in England but each pudding begins with the same basic ingredients of milk, sugar, eggs, flour and butter. Many of the puddings involve fresh fruit such as raspberries or strawberries, custard, cream, and cakes.

“ … a moment later the puddings appeared. Blocks of ice cream in every flavour you could think of, apple pies, treacle tarts, chocolate éclairs and jam doughnuts, trifle, strawberries, jelly, rice pudding…”

Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, J. K. Rowling

The more traditional and well known home-made puddings are apple or rhubarb crumble, bread and butter pudding, spotted dick and trifle. The traditional accompaniment is custard. The dishes are simple and traditional, with recipes passed on from generation to generation.

Spotted Dick (Also called Spotted Dog)

Sponge pudding with sultanas and raisins.

Trifle

Made with layers of sponge cake altternate with custard, jam or fruit and Whipped Cream. Sometimes alcohol-soaked sponge cake is used.

Apple Crumble

Often served with thick cream, ice cream or custard.

Hasty Pudding

A simple and quick (thus the name) steamed pudding of milk, flour, butter, eggs, and cinnamon.

Bakewell pudding - also called Bakewell Tart.

Custard

A thick, rich, sweet mixture made by gently cooking together egg yolks, sugar, milk or cream, and sometimes other flavorings. Most people today use a yellow powder mixed with milk, water and sugar. Custard can be served as a hot sauce, poured over a dessert, or as a cold layer in, for example, a trifle. When it is cold, it 'sets' and becomes firm.

Bread and butter pudding - old English favourite

Semolina Pudding

A smooth, creamy puddmade of milk, eggs, flavouring and sugaring. Semolina is cooked slowly in milk, sweetened with sugar and flavoured with vanilla and sometimes enriched with egg. Semolina pudding can be served with raisins, currants or sultanas stirred in or with a dollop of jam.

Roly-poly

A pudding made of jam or fruit rolled up in pastry dough and baked or steamed until soft.



English Crumpets

A tasty "muffin" that goes great with tea, and spread with butter and preserves.

Mince Pies

Pastry shells filled with mince meat, and sometimes brandy or rum. Traditionally eaten at Christmas time.

Treacle pudding

A steamed pudding with a syrup topping.

Jelly and Ice Cream

A favourite party food for children.

Parkin
A spicy cake combining oatmeal and ginger. Traditionally enjoyed around Guy Fawkes Night (November 5)

Sample Pudding Menu Served in a Restaurant in England

Apple and Plum Crumble with custard

Served hot or cold with cream, custard or ice cream.

Apple and Blackberry Crumble

Served hot or cold with cream, custard or ice cream.

Vanilla creme brulee with a Shrewsbury biscuit

Lemon Meringue served cold with cream or ice cream.

Strawberry cheesecake with strawberry sauce

Bread & Butter Pudding served hot with custard

Sticky toffee pudding with vanilla ice cream toffee sauce

Ice creams - strawberry and cream, vanilla, chocolate, rum and raisin and honeycomb

Sorbets - raspberry, lemon, blackcurrant, mandarin and apple

Pies in England

Pies are very popular in England. Pies are a baked dish consisting of a filling such as chopped meat or fruit enclosed in or covered with pastry (a mixture of flour and butter).

Favourite meat (savoury) pies include:

Pork pie

A pork pie consists of pork and pork jelly in a hot water crust pastry and is normally eaten cold.

Steak and Kidney pie

A traditional English dish consisting of a cooked mixture of chopped beef, kidneys, onions, mushrooms and beef stock. This mixture is placed in a pie or casserole dish, covered with a pastry crust and baked until crisp and brown.

Cornish pastie / Cornish pasty

A type of pie, originating in Cornwall, South West England. It is an oven-cooked pastry case traditionally filled with diced meat - nowadays beef mince (ground beef) or steak - potato, onion and swede. It has a semicircular shape, caused by folding a circular pastry sheet over the filling. One edge is crimped to form a seal.

Cornish pasty in the days of the miners, used to be half savoury and half sweet, all wrapped in one piece of pastry. That way it was like a main course and dessert all in one.

Stargazy Pie

Herrings are cooked whole in a pie. with their heads looking skyward and tails in the middle.

Favourite fruit (sweet) pies include:

  • Apple pie
  • Rhubarb pie,
  • Blackberry pie,
  • A mixture of fruits such as apple and rhubarb or apple and blackberry.

World's Biggest Pie

Every now and then the villagers of Denby Dale, near Huddersfield, Yorkshire bake the world's biggest meat and potato pie

The first recorded making of a pie in the village was in 1788 to celebrate the recovery of King George III from mental illness. Since that time nine other pies have been baked, usually to coincide with a special event or to raise money for a local cause.

The pie dish in the year 2000 weighed 12 tonnes and was 40ft long, 8ft wide and 3ft 8in deep, and the pie itself contained three tonnes of beef, half a tonne of potatoes and 22 gallons of John Snith's Best Bitter. It was transported into Pie Field on a 70ft waggon - and blessed by the Bishop of Wakefield.

Cheeses

Cheese is enjoyed by over 98% of British households. Cheddar is a clear favourite, accounting for over 57% of the market, and is bought regularly by 94% of households. It is a hard cheese with a strong, nutty taste.

Cheddar originates from a village in Somerset in western England, also famous for its gorge. There are six varieties of cheddar - mild, medium, mature, vintage, Farmhouse and West Country.

Cheese varieties

English people have a great love for cheese and over 400 varieties of cheese are produced in England. They all have unique flavours and textures. The most common are the harder varieties such as Cheddar, Stilton, Red Leicester, Cheshire and Double Gloucester.

Named after places

Many cheeses are named after the place or area they are made. These cheeses include Caerphilly, Cheshire, Derby, Double Gloucester, Lancashire, Red Leicester, Stilton and Wensleydale.

Speciallity cheeses

Speciality cheeses include the Cornish Yarg, Shropshire Blue, Somerset Brie and Camembert.

Dates of introduction of various foodstuffs and methods to Britain

Prehistory (before 43 AD)

  • bread from mixed grains: around 3700 BC
  • oats: around 1000 BC
  • wheat: around 500 BC
  • rabbit: late Iron Age/early Roman

Roman era (43 to 410)

  • apple, asparagus, celery, chives, coriander, cucumber, marjoram, marrow, onion, parsnip, pea, pheasant, rosemary, spearmint, turnip, wine

Middle ages to the discovery of the New World (410 to 1492)

  • kipper: 9th century (from Denmark or Norway)
  • rye bread: Viking era,around 500 AD
  • peach (imported): Anglo-Saxon
  • orange: 1290
  • sugar cane: 14th century
  • carrot: 15th century

1492 to 1914

  • turkey: 1524
  • cayenne pepper, parsley: 1548
  • refined sugar: 1540s
  • lemon: 1577 (first recorded cultivation)
  • peach (cultivated): 16th century
  • potato: 1586
  • horseradish: 16th century
  • tea: 1610 or later
  • banana (from Bermuda): 1633
  • coffee: 1650
  • chocolate: 1650s
  • broccoli: before 1724
  • tomato (as food): 1750s
  • sandwich: named in 18th century
  • curry: 1809 (first Indian restaurant)
  • rhubarb (as food): early 1800s
  • three-course meal: about 1850 (developed from service à la Russe)
  • fish and chips: 1858 or 1863
  • Marmite: 1902
  • ice cream: 1913

After 1914

  • sugar beet: 1914-1918
  • sliced bread: 1930
  • Chinese restaurant: 1950 (first to open in Soho)

James Trevor Oliver

The Naked Chef, is an English celebrity chef. He is well known for his role in campaigning against processed foods in British schools. Since his early years, his Essex (East Anglian) accent, which is often described as "mockney" or "fake cockney," has become infamous - particularly the use of the hindi word "pukka" (colloquially meaning "brilliant" or "solid", originally "cooked" or "ripe"). Oliver is reported to be worth an estimated £25 million.

Television shows

The Naked Chef (1998-1999) was Oliver's first series. The title was a reference to the simplicity of Oliver's recipes, and has nothing to do with nudity. Oliver has frequently admitted that he wasn't entirely happy with the title, which was devised by producer Patricia Llewellyn. (In the UK edit of the show, the opening titles include a clip of him telling an unseen questioner, "No way! It's not me, it's the food!") The success of the programme led to the books Return of the Naked Chef and Happy Days with the Naked Chef.

Jamie's Kitchen was a 2002 documentary series. It followed chef Jamie Oliver as he attempted to train a group of disadvantaged youth, who would - if they completed the course - be offered jobs at Oliver's new restaurant Fifteen. This was followed by Return to Jamie's Kitchen in 2003.

Jamie's Kitchen Australia was a 2006 television series, similar to Jamie's kitchen, that was based in and aired in Australia.

Jamie's School Dinners (2005) was a 4-episode documentary series. Oliver took responsibility for running the kitchen meals in Kidbrooke School, Greenwich, for a year. Disgusted by the unhealthy fare being served to schoolchildren and the lack of healthy alternatives on offer, Oliver began a campaign to improve the standard of Britain’s school meals. Public awareness was raised, and, subsequent to Oliver's efforts, the UK Government pledged to spend £280m on school dinners (spread over three years). Tony Blair himself acknowledged that this was a result of Oliver's campaign. Following the success of the campaign, Oliver was named "Most Inspiring Political Figure of 2005" in the Channel 4 Political Awards 2006. During the school dinners programme, Oliver's Fifteen London was visited by Bill Clinton. Clinton asked to see Oliver; however, Oliver refused, as Clinton's party had asked for other diners to be removed to make room for their larger-than-agreed-upon group. In episode 2 of Jamie's School Dinners, Clinton's party had 36 show up for a booking of 16 and many of them were on a South Beach Diet and did not want the special menu that had been prepared, even though the menu had been approved in advance.

Jamie's Great Escape (also known as Jamie's Great Italian Escape), a travelogue series, was first broadcast on Channel 4 in the UK in October 2005.

Jamie's Return To School Dinners

Jamie's Chef (2007) continues where Jamie's Kitchen left off. Five years and fifty trainees later, Oliver's most recent series aims to help the winning trainee establish their own restaurant at The Cock, a pub near Braintree in Essex. The charitable Fifteen Foundation retains ownership of the property and has provided a £125,000 loan for the winner, Aaron Craze, to refurbish the establishment.

Jamie at Home (2007) featured Jamie presenting home-style recipes and gardening tips, with many ingredients coming from his substantial home garden.

Jamie at Home Christmas special (2007)

Jamie's Fowl Dinners (2008) A special with Jamie backing Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall's "Hugh's Chicken Run" in trying to get the British to eat free-range chickens

Oliver's programmes are shown in over 40 countries, including the USA's Food Network. Oliver's Twist and "Pukka Tukka" picked up where "The Naked Chef" left off.

Other television appearances

Jamie Oliver has twice guest-hosted Channel 4's The Friday Night Project.

He has also made two appearances in the "Star in a Reasonably-Priced Car" segment of BBC Two's Top Gear. His first appearance was notorious for his attempt to make a green salad in the back of his Volkswagen Microbus while The Stig drove it around the Top Gear test track.

Oliver is the second British celebrity chef (after Robert Irvine) to appear as a challenger on Iron Chef America, taking on Iron Chef Mario Batali in 2008 in a losing battle with cobia as the theme ingredient.

He is due to star as one of the judges in the 2008 US series The Big Give hosted by Oprah Winfrey on ABC.

Cookbooks

Something for the Weekend

The Naked Chef

Something for the Weekend

The Return of the Naked Chef

Happy Days with the Naked Chef

The Naked Chef Takes Off

Jamie's Kitchen

Jamie's Dinners

Jamie's Italy

Cook With Jamie

Jamie at Home



Nigella Lucy Lawson

Is an English journalist, food writer, broadcaster and television presenter. After graduating from Oxford, Lawson worked as a book reviewer and soon became the deputy literary editor of The Sunday Times in 1986. She then began work as a freelance journalist. Lawson wrote her first cookery book, How to Eat, in 1998; this became an instant bestseller and sold 300,000 copies. She followed this up with a second bestseller, How to be a Domestic Goddess in 2000, winning her a British Book Award.

Her career progressed in the United Kingdom in 2000 when she hosted her own Channel 4 cookery programme, Nigella Bites, which was accompanied with another bestseller. She also hosted a less successful chat show on ITV in 2005, which was followed by two successful cookery series on BBC Two. Lawson also enjoys a successful career in the United States where Nigella Feasts has been aired on the Food Network. Her own cookware range is reportedly worth £7 million a year, and she has sold more than 3 million cookery books worldwide.

Television

Following slots as a culinary sidekick on Nigel Slater's Real Food Show on Channel 4, she eventually went on to host her own television cookery series. Her interest in food was originally sparked after a visit to Paris as a teenager, after which time she looked upon food as source of enjoyment.

Throughout Lawson's programmes, which are broadcast worldwide, she emphasises that she cooks for her own pleasure rather than to please others, and that she finds cooking therapeutic. She has adopted a laid-back and relaxed approach to cooking and says "I think part of my appeal is that my approach to cooking is really relaxed and not rigid. There are no rules in my kitchen." She has become renowned for her flirtatious manner of presenting, but she has stated, "It’s not meant to be flirtatious. I don’t have the talent to adopt a different persona. It's intimate, not flirtatious." Lawson is also infamous for her vivid and adjective-packed food descriptions in both her books and television programmes, as one critic wrote "her descriptions of food can be a tangle of adjectives." She is not a trained chef nor does she like being referred to as a "celebrity chef".

The television series of Nigella Express was subject to criticism from The Daily Mail when it emerged that a bus Lawson was seen travelling on during the programme was hired and filled by extras. The producers responded by saying, "This series is a factual entertainment cooking show, not an observational documentary and it is perfectly normal procedure." It was also revealed that the kitchens in which Lawson was seen cooking are in two separate locations; one in her home and the other in a television studio in Battersea, South London. Lawson herself also came under criticism when viewers complained that she had gained weight since the debut episode of the series.Critics criticised the series for containing what they described as "scenes of gluttony not seen since the golden age of the Cookie Monster."

The rights to the series have since been sold to the Food Network in America, and to Discovery Asia.

Awards

2000: British Book Award - Author of the Year for How to be a Domestic Goddess

2001: WH Smith Book Award - How To Be A Domestic Goddess shortlisted for Lifestyle Book of the Year

2001: Guild of Food Writers - Television Broadcast of the Year for Nigella Bites

2001: World Food Media Awards - Gold Ladle best television food show for Nigella Bites

2002: WH Smith Book Awards - Lifestyle Book of the Year for Nigella Bites



Gordon James Ramsay


Is a celebrity chef, television personality and entrepreneur. He has been awarded a total of twelve Michelin stars, and is currently one of only three chefs in the UK whose restaurant is rated at three Michelin stars. He is famous in the UK for presenting TV programmes about competitive cookery and food such as Hell's Kitchen and The F-Word. He is best known in the United States as the host of FOX's Hell's Kitchen, which premiered in May 2005, and of Kitchen Nightmares, which premiered in September 2007, based on his successful British show Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares.

Upon his return to London in 1993, Ramsay was offered the position of head chef at La Tante Claire in Chelsea. Shortly thereafter, Marco White re-entered his life, offering to set him up with a head chef position and 25% share in the Rossmore, owned by White's business partners. The restaurant was renamed Aubergine and went on to win its first Michelin star fourteen months later. In 1997, Aubergine won its second Michelin star. Despite the restaurant's success, a dispute with Ramsay's business owners led to his leaving the partnership in 1997.

In 1998, Ramsay opened his own restaurant in Chelsea, Gordon Ramsay at Royal Hospital Road, with the help of his father-in-law, Chris Hutcheson. The restaurant gained its third Michelin star in 2001, making Ramsay the first Scot to achieve that feat.

From his first restaurant, Ramsay's empire has expanded rapidly, first opening Petrus, where six bankers famously spent over £44,000 on wine during a single meal in 2001, then Argan cafe in Glasgow (which he was later forced to close) and later Gordon Ramsay at Claridge's. Restaurants at the Dubai Creek and Connaught Hotels followed, the latter branded with his protégée, Angela Hartnett's, name. Ramsay has now begun opening restaurants outside the UK, beginning with Verre in Dubai. Gordon Ramsay at Conrad Tokyo and Cerise by Gordon Ramsay both opened in Tokyo in 2005, and in November, 2006, Gordon Ramsay at the London opened in New York City, winning top newcomer in the city’s coveted Zagat guide, despite mixed reviews from professional critics.

In 2007, Ramsay opened his first Irish restaurant; "Gordon Ramsay at Powerscourt" opened at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Powerscourt, Co. Wicklow, Ireland.

Television

Ramsay's first foray in television was in two fly-on-the-kitchen-wall documentaries: Boiling Point (1998) and Beyond Boiling Point (2000).

In 2004, Ramsay appeared in two British television series. Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares aired on Channel 4, and saw the chef troubleshooting failing restaurants over a one week period. This series ran its fifth season in 2007. Hell's Kitchen was a reality show, which aired on ITV1, and saw Ramsay attempt to train ten British celebrities to be chefs, as they ran a restaurant on Brick Lane which opened to the public for the two-week duration of the show.

His most recent series is a food-based magazine program titled The F-Word; it launched on Channel 4 on October 27, 2005. The show is organised around several key, recurring features, notably a brigade competition, a guest cook competition, a food related investigative report and a series-long project of raising animals to be served in the finale. The guest cook (usually a celebrity) prepares a dish of their own choosing and places it in competition against a similar dish submitted by Ramsay. The dishes are judged by diners who are unaware of who cooked which dish and, if the guest wins (as they have on numerous occasions), their dish is served at Ramsay's restaurant. Each series also features a series-long project of raising animals to be used as the main course in the series finale. In the first series of The F-Word, Ramsay mockingly named the turkeys he raised: Antony, Ainsley, Jamie, Delia, Gary and Nigella--all in reference to other famous celebrity chefs. During the second series, Ramsay named the two pigs that he was raising after Trinny Woodall and Susannah Constantine who found the naming highly amusing. In July 2006, Channel 4 announced that it had re-signed Ramsay to an exclusive four-year deal at the network, running until July 2011. During the third series, Ramsay reared lambs that had been selected from a farm in North Wales and he named them after two Welsh celebrities, Charlotte Church and Gavin Henson. The series became one of the highest rated shows aired on Channel 4 each week.

During one episode of The F-Word, Ramsay cooked in Doncaster Prison in Marshgate for its inmates. He challenged prisoner Kieron Tarff to an onion-chopping race, which Ramsay lost. The chef was so impressed by Tarff that he offered him a job at his restaurant when he is released (in 2007).

Food views

On the second series of The F-Word Ramsay showed a softened stance after learning about intensive pig farming practices including castration and tail docking. On the programme, Ramsay commented, "It's enough to make anyone turn fucking vegetarian, for God's sake. And I've always sort of knocked vegetarians and vegans for missing out on the most amazing flavour you can get from meat. But you can see why so many people change instantly."

Some controversy arose during the third series of The F-Word when journalist Janet Street-Porter, contending that horse meat should be eaten more widely in Britain, attempted to serve horse steaks at Cheltenham horse races. She was prevented from doing so by police, who deemed the stunt 'highly provocative'. She subsequently served the meat from a private property, garnering the approval of most of the consumers shown in the programme. The conclusion of both Street-Porter and Ramsay was that horse meat merited a more prominent place in Britain's national diet. In the wake of the stunt, representatives of animal rights group PETA protested by dumping a tonne of horse manure outside Ramsay's restaurant at Claridge's in central London.

Restaurants

United Kingdom

  • Restaurant Gordon Ramsay at Royal Hospital Road (three Michelin stars), Mark Askew (executive chef), Clare Smyth (head chef)
  • Pétrus at the Berkeley Hotel (two Michelin stars), Marcus Wareing (executive chef)
  • Gordon Ramsay at Claridge's (one Michelin star), Mark Sargeant (executive chef)
  • The Boxwood Café at the Berkeley Hotel, Stuart Gillies (executive chef)
  • Maze, (one Michelin star) Jason Atherton (executive chef)
  • Foxtrot Oscar
  • Maze Grill, Marriott Hotel in Grosvenor Square (Opening March 2008)
  • Gordon Ramsay's Plane Food at London Heathrow Airport Terminal 5 (Opening March 2008)
  • York and Albany, Regents Park, Angela Hartnett (executive chef) Opening April 2008
  • Murano, Mayfair, Angela Hartnett (executive chef) Opening June 2008

Pubs

  • The Narrow
  • The Devonshire House
  • The Warrington

International

  • Gordon Ramsay at The London (two Michelin stars), New York, Josh Emett (chef de cuisine)
  • Maze by Gordon Ramsay at The London, New York City
  • Verre at the Hilton Dubai Creek, Dubai
  • Gordon Ramsay at Conrad Tokyo", Tokyo
  • Cerise by Gordon Ramsay, Tokyo
  • Cielo by Angela Hartnett, Florida, Christopher Eagle (Head chef)
  • Gordon Ramsay at the Ritz-Carlton, Powerscourt, Co. Wicklow, Ireland
  • Maze by Gordon Ramsay at The Hilton Prague Old Town, Prague, Czech Republic, Phillip Carmichael (Head chef)
  • Gordon Ramsay at The London, West Hollywood (Opening April 2008)
  • Gordon Ramsay at The Trianon Palace, Versailles near Paris (Opening March 2008), Simone Zanoni (head chef)
  • Gordon Ramsay at The Pulitzer Hotel, Amsterdam (Planned for 2008)
  • Gordon Ramsay at The Atlantis Sentosa Resort, Singapore (Planned for 2010)


Delia Smith

Is an English television cook, known for her interest in teaching basic cookery skills. She is the UK's best-selling cookery author, with more than 18 million copies sold.

Born in Woking, Surrey, Delia left school at 16 without a single O-level. Her first job was as a hairdresser, and she also worked as a shop assistant and in a travel agency before starting her career in cookery. At 21, she started work in a tiny restaurant in Paddington called The Singing Chef. She started as a washer-upper, then moved on to waitressing, and then was allowed to help with the cooking. She started reading English cookery books in the Reading Room at the British Museum, trying out the recipes on a Harley Street family with whom she was living at the time.

In 1969, Delia was taken on as the cookery writer for the Daily Mirror's new magazine. Their Deputy Editor was Michael Wynn-Jones whom she later married. Her first piece featured kipper pâté, beef in beer, and cheesecake. Her first cookery book (1971) was How to Cheat at Cooking. In 1972 she started a column in the Evening Standard which she was to write for 12 years. Later she wrote a successful column for the Radio Times until 1986. Delia became famous by hosting a cookery television show Family Fare which ran between 1973-1975.

Delia approached BBC Further Education with an idea for their first televised cookery course. Her aim was to educate people in how to cook, take them back to basics and cover all the classic techniques. Accompanying books were needed to explain not only how, but why things happen. This led to her three Cookery Course books. Eventually, a new phrase was coined called the 'Delia Effect', which usually involves a huge surge in purchases for a food item or utensil after it has been featured on her show or referenced in one of her books. This effect was most recently seen in 2008 after her new book How to Cheat at Cooking was published.

Her television series Delia's How to Cook (1998) reportedly led to a 10% rise in egg sales in Britain, and her use of ingredients (such as cranberries) or utensils (such as an omelette pan) can cause sell-outs overnight. Because of this fame, her first name has become sufficient to identify her to the public, and 'the Delia effect' has become a commonly used phrase to describe a run on a previously poor-selling product, on the basis of a high-profile recommendation.

In 2003 Delia announced her retirement from television. However, she returned for an eponymously-titled six-part series airing on the BBC in Spring 2008. The accompanying book, an update of her original best-selling 1971 book How to Cheat at Cooking, was publushed by Ebury Press in February 2008, immediately becoming a number one best-seller. Items to have benefitted from the Delia effect as a result include the Kenwood mini-chopper, Martelli pasta and Aunt Bessie's mashed potato.

Cookery books

  • How to Cheat at Cooking (1971)
  • Recipes from Country Inns and Restaurants (1973)
  • The Evening Standard Cookbook (1974)
  • Frugal Food (1976)
  • Cakes, Bakes & Steaks (1977)
  • Delia Smith's Book of Cakes (1977)
  • Delia Smith's Cookery Course (3 volumes: 1978, 1979 & 1980)
  • One is Fun (1986)
  • Complete Illustrated Cookery Course (1989)
  • Delia Smith's Christmas (1990)
  • Delia Smith's Summer Collection (1993)
  • Delia Smith's Winter Collection (1995) (winner of the 1996 British Book of the Year award).
  • Delia's How to Cook—Book 1 (1998) (based on the television series)
  • Delia's How to Cook—Book 2 (1999)
  • Delia's How to Cook—Book 3 (2001)
  • The Delia Collection (2003) (several themed volumes)
  • Delia's Kitchen Garden: A Beginners' Guide to Growing and Cooking Fruit and Vegetables (2004)
  • The Delia Collection - Puddings (2006)
  • Smith, Delia (February 2007). Delia's Kitchen Garden. BBC Books.
  • Smith, Delia (February 2008). How to Cheat at Cooking. Ebury Press.


Fanny Cradock


Was an English restaurant critic, television cook and writer who mostly worked with John "Johnnie" Cradock, whose surname she adopted long before they married.

Cradock's TV programmes were extremely popular in the late 1950s. Fanny advocated bringing Escoffier-standard food into the British home and gave every recipe a French name. Her food looked extravagant but was generally cost effective and Fanny seemed to truly care for her audience. Regular catchphrases were; "This won't break you", "This is perfectly economical", "This won't stretch your purse". She insisted that "Everyone [was] entitled to a piece of really good cake at least once a year".

As time went on, her food became outdated. Her love of the piping bag and vegetable dyes meant that her television show began to border on farce. As she got older, she applied more and more make-up and would wear vast chiffon ballgowns on screen. Her apronless cry, both on screen and on stage, was that "cooking is a cleanly art, not a grubby chore". Using language that would never have found its way into her Bon Viveur columns, she spat: "Only a slut gets in a mess in the kitchen."

By this stage, when Fanny spoke, the world listened. She campaigned against artificial flavourings and fertilisers - the Cradock tomatoes were fed on a diet of tea and pee dubbed "Madam's Tonic" - and in 1974 she sent the Ayr fishing fleet into panic after revealing that monkfish was being widely used in scampi as a cheaper alternative to prawns. She had firm views, too, on what her viewers and readers should do at Christmas. In Fanny's book, there was no beginning or end to the preparations: Christmas puddings should be prepared a year in advance, although a batch Fanny made for Harrods in the early Sixties had to be returned when they went mouldy. Every month had its tasks: pickling walnuts, preserving angelica, making potpourri. Her fervour for DIY was also reflected in her accent on wreaths, flamboyant table designs and home-made decorations - an enterprise that she claimed could keep children "absorbed throughout the long winter evenings".

Fanny Cradock's last television cookery programmes should be Christmas-themed. Her series Cradock Cooks for Christmas is the only one of her programmes to have been shown in the past decade - enjoying an annual Christmas re-run on the UK digital television channel UKTV Food.

TV shows

  • Fanny's Kitchen
  • Chez Bon Viveur
  • The Cradocks
  • Dinner Party
  • Fanny Cradock Invites
  • Cradock cooks for Christmas

Cookbooks

  • Cooking with Bon Viveur 1955 Museum Press Ltd (writing as John and Phyllis Cradock)
  • Bon Viveur Recipes circa 1960 Daily Mail
  • The Daily Telegraph Cook's Book by Bon Viveur 1964 Collins Fontana Books
  • The Daily Telegraph Sociable Cook's Book by Bon Viveur 1967 Collins Fontana Books
  • Fanny & Johnnie Cradocks' The Cook Hostess' Book 1970 Cookery Book Club
  • Modest but Delicious 1973 Arlington Books/The Daily Telegraph
  • Common Market cookery France (1973) BBC
  • 365 Puddings by Bon Viveur Summer 1975 The Daily Telegraph
  • 365 Soups by Bon Viveur Winter 1977 The Daily Telegraph
  • Fanny & Johnnie Cradock's Freezer Book 1978 W H Allen
  • A Cook's Essential Alphabet 1979 W H Allen
  • Time to Remember - A Cook for All Seasons 1981 Web & Bower

Booklets

  • Home Cooking 1965 BBC (TV Series April - June 1965)
  • Adventurous Cooking 1966 BBC (TV Series April - June 1965)
  • Ten Classic Dishes 1967 BBC (TV Series January - March 1968)
  • Problem Cooking 1967 BBC (TV Series 1967
  • Eight Special Menus for the Busy Cook-Hostess 1967 Gas Council
  • Colourful Cookery 1968 BBC (TV Series Oct - December 1968)
  • Giving a Dinner Party 1969 BBC (TV Series July - October 1969)
  • Fanny Craddock Invites 1970 BBC (TV Series July - October 1970)
  • Fanny Cradock's Nationwide Cook Book 1972 BBC
  • Fanny Cradock's Christmas Cooking 1975 BBC (TV Series November - December 1975)