News1 min ago
Any chefs out there?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hi country_boy, i had a 24 cover in an antiques market in Kingston for a year.(had to give up due to unforseen circumstances)
I just served home made food... soups and real bread.... lasagnes for Italian day... Curries for curry day.... Falafel for Israel etc day..... or just whatever i fancied making lol.... it was very hard work but i had 3 fabulous staff....
Hi CB - I love food - its all I eat, so I want to make sure I know about where it comes from.
I publish a magazine for the farmers' markets in the UK called FreeRange - see it at www.freerangemag.co.uk ...and a subscription makes a lovely present....
Wrote 'The Scottish Farmers' Market Cookbook' - info at www.nwp.co.uk under the 'Angels Share' imprint - buy online of course - 2nd edition just been published.
Getting to do a bit more work now with Slow Food movement and suchlike and various online faclilities like www.harvest-fayre.co.uk for online shopping and www.bigbarn.co.uk, and have various contacts with cheffy types at all levels, TV food programmes, Masterchefs of Great Britain and cookery schools, advising food event organisers etc. and local producers to basically take any opportunity to promote farm gate retail, artisan producers and the local food network.
I'll talk to anyone for hours about what is going on in terms of food production processes, how eco- and ethical some farming practices are (or not), the benefits of local shopping and provenance of food etc etc, and again just want to push people into looking at the way we shop and consider what it is we are being sold in terms of quality and taste by the uniform face of supermarkets. Which aren't super at all...
hiya i am a chef
i trained at Leith's in London.
i came back to glasgow and worked in a restaraunt for 3 yrs, broke my wrist and havent been able to go back.
i do catering for parties and buffets etc.
i hated the fact i had to give up working in restaraunts but i dont have the strength in my wrist anymore.
i want to open a children's cookery school in Edinburgh where i live now.
Hi CB - Appreciate the comments, and hope you do get to try the book!! - have a look at bigbarn site as well as that offers locations for farm shops and suppliers by postcode on their mapping service. And don't forget box schemes if you can't get to the market.
Any local supplier - and don't forget the greengrocer, fishmongers and butchers - will be able to give you a better service, I would argue than the s/markets.
The lack of seasonality in s/markets has really ruined the enjoyment in experiencing fresh food - maybe its just a cultural thing in the UK but go almost anyere else in Europe and there is a real emphasis on quality, pride in offering the freshest goods and a real interest in food on the plate.
Here we have shops selling us Smart ready meals - what the heck is so smart about swiping a bar code on a box past a reader on a microwave? And now packaging that is sold as intelligent - labels that change colour if the food is off - because we can't read sell by dates? Pathetic. Why not just buy fresh ingredients in the first place...
As for cost, FreeRange this month has a comparison between f/market and s/market shop prices, and the f/market is 20% cheaper on a like for like shop, so don't think they are only expensive treats !!
Go for it iluvcatz - the f/markets will always be a nicer shopping trip! Good on you..