Kingdom of Cooks
New
e-book Lifts the Lid on the UK Restaurant Scene
Andy
Lynes, the well-known food, drink and travel writer, has published
his first e-book, Kingdom
of Cooks: Conversations with Britain's New Wave Chefs.
In a series of in-depth interviews with some of the most exciting,
acclaimed and innovative UK chefs, including Simon Rogan (L'Enclume,
Cartmel, and Fera at Claridge’s, London), Mary-Ellen McTague
(Aumbry, Manchester), Neil Rankin (The Smokehouse, London) and Gary
Usher (Sticky Walnut, Chester), the book details the harsh realities
of being a chef, the astonishing hard work it takes to make it to the
top, and reveals the secrets of creating delicious restaurant dishes.
Kingdom
of Cooks is a
must-read for foodies, professional chefs and anyone who has ever
dined in a restaurant and wondered just what goes on behind the
kitchen door. The interviews take the reader behind the scenes of
some of the most famous kitchens in the country to show what it's
really like paying your dues working for chefs such as Gordon Ramsay,
Heston Blumenthal and Jamie Oliver.
The
book also documents an important moment in the history of British
restaurant cooking where the eclecticism first mooted by the modern
British movement of the late 80's meets the locavore imperative of
the 21st century to create a truly distinctive style of British food
for the mid-2010's.
“I've been passionately interested in food and drink for more than 30 years and writing about it for a decade. In my experience, there has never been a more exciting time to eat out in this country,” says Lynes, who embarked on a journey of more than 2,000km and criss-crossed the UK in order to speak to 14 chefs in 13 restaurants, and consumed over 80 courses of restaurant food in the name of research. “Although London is the accepted capital of food in the UK, I've literally gone out of my way to prove there is something gastronomically exciting happening in every corner of the country.”
The
chefs talk about their careers, their cooking styles and the
techniques and ingredients that help set them apart from the crowd.
Individual signature dishes, such as Chris Harrod of The Crown at
Whitebrook's suckling pig with celeriac, pear and woodland sorrel,
are discussed in detail, and you'll learn everything from how to make
the perfect pork crackling to how to use every last scrap of a fish,
literally down to the last scale.
Each
chef has contributed a recipe – these include partridge, burnt
heather, celeriac, watercress and chanterelles by Ben Radford of
Timberyard in Edinburgh; Neil Rankin's Smokehouse short rib
Bourguignon; and salt-baked beetroot, smoked eel, lettuce and chicken
skin by Stepehen Toman of OX in Belfast.
Contact
details for all 13 establishments are included in the book, covering
England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, making the book a
short restaurant guide for readers to follow in the author's
footsteps. Numerous other chefs and restaurants, both in the UK and
abroad, are mentioned in passing, making Kingdom
of Cooks an instant
primer to the current restaurant scene.
“There
is nothing I like better than a good old chin wag about food and
drink, and I realised that my work as a journalist afforded me
privileged access to talented chefs,” added Lynes. “By
documenting some of those unexpurgated conversations in print I've
allowed readers in on some fascinating conversations they might
otherwise not be party to.”
Kingdom
of Cooks: Conversations with Britain's New Wave Chefs
by Andy Lynes is now available from Amazon's Kindle store, priced
£2.99.
Andy
Lynes is an author and freelance food, drink and travel writer. His
work appears in The Times, The Telegraph and The Independent. He
has reviewed restaurants for the Metro and the Guardian, and is
currently a member of the 60SecondReviews.com
team. Andy is also a contributing editor to Seasoned by
Chef's magazine, and food and drink editor of Zuri magazine. He
writes regularly for Host, the pub and bar magazine, and The Caterer.
As well, he has contributed to a number of books, including two
editions of Where
Chefs Eat
and the Oxford
Companion to Food.
His second book, How
to be a Chilli Head,
will be published by Portico in May 2015.
Chef/restaurateur
Simon Rogan commented: “Andy is a true professional. He cares about
food, and likes to dig deep into the creative side of the whole
cooking process in order to understand chefs and restaurants.”
Andy
Lynes is available for interviews, or to write articles related to
the book. A PDF version of the book is available for review on
request. His contact details are: Email - andylynes@gmail.com, or
Mobile - 07838-299 589.
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