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Leamington and Warwick Living Mar - Apr 2022

Spring has sprung! This edition is a celebration of the best of it - great food, cracking competitions, Easter bakes, a classic chef interview and an amazing bathroom transformation.

Spring has sprung! This edition is a celebration of the best of it - great food, cracking competitions, Easter bakes, a classic chef interview and an amazing bathroom transformation.

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IT'S ALL<br />

FULLER’S PUBS HAVE TEAMED<br />

UP WITH LEGENDARY CHEF,<br />

BRIAN TURNER CBE, TO TELL<br />

THE STORY OF FULLER’S<br />

SUNDAY ROASTS AND ALL<br />

THE TOUCHES THAT MAKE<br />

THEM A CUT ABOVE THE<br />

REST. FROM CAREFULLY<br />

SOURCED INGREDIENTS<br />

TO PASSIONATE PEOPLE,<br />

FULLER’S PRIDE THEMSELVES<br />

ON DELIVERING EVERYTHING<br />

THAT MAKES A SUNDAY<br />

SPECIAL AND EVEN BETTER<br />

WHEN YOU CAN SHARE THESE<br />

MOMENTS WITH FAMILY<br />

AND FRIENDS. THAT’S WHY<br />

THEY’VE INTRODUCED SHARE<br />

SUNDAYS.<br />

WE CAUGHT UP WITH CHEF<br />

BRIAN TURNER TO FIND OUT<br />

MORE...<br />

How did you get involved with Fuller’s<br />

pubs, <strong>and</strong> what made you choose to<br />

carry on with it?<br />

The way I got into Fuller’s was quite<br />

easy. For 28-29 years I was the British<br />

president of the UK team of the Bocuse<br />

d’Or competition, which is a worldwide<br />

cooking competition in Leon in France.<br />

It was held every two years <strong>and</strong> then it<br />

became every year <strong>and</strong> I was the judge<br />

for the British team. And somebody<br />

managed to make a connection between<br />

Fuller’s <strong>and</strong> the Bocuse d’Or, wanting to<br />

help sponsor it. So that’s how I met the<br />

Fuller’s team. Listening to Fuller’s team,<br />

I was really enthused <strong>and</strong> excited by the<br />

way they approached their training of<br />

chefs.<br />

From what I understood, they want<br />

to do something great as far as Chef<br />

training is concerned?<br />

Well, the reality of course is quite simple;<br />

it is for the survival of the future of the<br />

hospitality industry, which has been<br />

amazingly good to me. And amazingly<br />

good to lots of people. And those that<br />

have taken the opportunity have actually,<br />

I believe, got a better way of life. Even<br />

if you get trained in the hospitality<br />

business. If you get trained to be a chef,<br />

<strong>and</strong> for whatever reason you need to<br />

leave the industry, it leaves you with<br />

life skills; knowing how to buy the right<br />

product from the right place at the right<br />

price, <strong>and</strong> then convert it to the right dish<br />

on a plate. And then eventually, if you<br />

leave the business, it’s a skill that you<br />

need at home.<br />

I remember when I was at school a<br />

long, long time ago, we had domestic<br />

science, which was two hours on a<br />

Wednesday afternoon. It was a good<br />

thing to do!<br />

It was even better in my day. I was at<br />

school in the 1950s <strong>and</strong> in those days<br />

when we got to the third year in grammar<br />

school, you had to choose a craft, a skill.<br />

For boys it was woodwork or metal work<br />

for girls needlework or cookery. I was one<br />

of the few in Yorkshire that said ‘I want to<br />

do cookery’. They said ‘no lad, you can’t<br />

do that!’. But I did. Elsie Bibby, the lady<br />

who taught cookery at the parish, after<br />

the first month would say, “Okay girls,<br />

let’s gather around Brian’s table because<br />

his is always the best”. I was hated by the<br />

girls, but loved by Elsie Bibby!<br />

Is that when you first started cooking<br />

or were you always interested in it?<br />

No, I was quite fortunate in that respect in<br />

that my father was conscripted <strong>and</strong> went<br />

to the Second World War <strong>and</strong> served<br />

in Belgium <strong>and</strong> he was drafted into the<br />

catering corps. When he came back he<br />

went back to his job in the Morley Co-op.<br />

It would appear, having read the history<br />

of Morley Co-operative society, that my<br />

father gained a bit of a reputation for<br />

being a bit of a whiz with the old food<br />

knowledge he picked up in the war. So<br />

he opened a transport cafe. He had four<br />

children with my mother in five years so<br />

consequently she was overworked. I was<br />

the eldest, so whenever he could my dad<br />

took me down to his cafe to get me out<br />

of my mums way! So add Elsie Bibby on<br />

top of that, I would say that’s how I really<br />

got started in the business.<br />

So what’s your first foodie<br />

memory then?<br />

As a young man I was in the Salvation<br />

Army; I used to play in their b<strong>and</strong>. And<br />

they used to have a congress regularly<br />

where all the Salvation Armys around the<br />

area in Yorkshire would meet together<br />

<strong>and</strong> have a jolly old singsong. It was on a<br />

Sunday, but we had to eat so we had to<br />

go out. We had elders who helped. And<br />

they took us to an Italian restaurant where<br />

I ate food like I’ve never eaten before.<br />

So it was a very rare occasion <strong>and</strong> it was<br />

just so special. And we only managed to<br />

get to go there when we would do this<br />

congress.<br />

So what was your first job when you<br />

actually did go into kitchens proper, so<br />

to speak?<br />

Well, if we count the fact that I worked<br />

for my Dad in his transport cafe, so<br />

eventually all four of us used to go on a<br />

26 | www.minervamagazines.co.uk

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