Ep 36: Eco-chef Tom Hunt - Eating for pleasure, people and planet
Release Date: 03/20/2020
Food Tribe
Koya opened in 2010, specialising in Udon which they handmake fresh every day and pair with beautiful broths and toppings. Restaurants in London come and go, but Koya is still as loved, as popular, and as good today as it was 11 yrs ago. Their simple dishes, high-quality ingredients, thoughtful cooking, & exceptional flavours are a recipe for success.
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My guest today is a chef on a mission, championing Filipino cuisine in London. While working at other restaurants, Budgie started Sarap as a supper club, as a way to connect to his heritage, learn about Filipino food, and champion this underrepresented cuisine.
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Lulu has been cooking professionally since she was 18. Last year she left the kitchen to work on farms and learn more about regenerative growing which led to her co-founding SSAW Collective. They grow the most beautiful flowers and host pop-ups & food events that champion local, seasonal ingredients. Lulu is so lovely, she’s a fantastic cook, and she cares about the connection between food, farming, and our environment. She’s one to watch on the UK food and farming scene...
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Ollie recently published his second book, Join the Greener Revolution: 30 easy ways to live and eat sustainably. He believes that sustainability is the only way forward, and that it has to be at the centre of everything - whether it be food, our communities, economics, energy, education, or simply making a loaf of bread...
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Uyen has recently published her book called Vietnamese, and it’s a beauty!
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Bettina's on a mission to share the beauty and power of plant-based foods, get more people cooking wholesome dishes from scratch, and caring about where our food comes from. Her 3rd book, Celebrate, is out later this summer and it’s filled with crowd-pleaser dishes for feasts and parties - don’t we know we need a few of those in our lives! Bettina and I chat about her career in food, her new book, and how food plays such a critical role, especially for women, in balancing our hormones and helping us thr
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Over 10 yrs ago Hetty began making salads from her home kitchen. She quickly grew a cult following which led to her publishing her first book, Community. And the rest, as they say, is history.
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Since leaving Mexico at 18, Santiago has been traveling the world, and in 2017 after his experience of managing the Noma Mexico pop-up in Tulum he a dream of putting down roots and creating his own restaurant, a home, a community, a place where people could come to experience the tastes, and hospitality, and soul of Mexico. And that's exactly what he's done - Kol is now open in the heart of London. It’s something very special! Santiago shares the journey so far and what opening his restaurant means to him
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My guest today is farmer and butcher Ian Warren, who owns the family-run Philip Warren Butchers in Cornwall. They produce and sell some of the highest quality meat in the UK, supplying top restaurants in the country, and also selling directly to consumers.
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My guest today is the creative, unconventional, and brilliant Willy Wonka of British wine. Ben Walgate is pushing the boundaries of winemaking in the UK - from the grape varieties he uses, the styles of wine he’s producing, his combination of aging methods, to his vision for the farm and his wine.
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Like many of us, I’ve become a lot more interested in the connection to our food, where it comes from, how it’s grown, the impact our decisions have on our food system and what that means for our environment.
So, this season I’ve decided to expand the guest list to include some farmers and producers and chefs leading the way when it comes to growing, producing and cooking in a sustainable way.
This episode I’m chatting to Tom Hunt - a chef, a food writer, co-owner of Poco restaurant in Bristol, a cookbook author, sustainability consultant and a climate change activist.
Tom’s mission is to connect us to the true value of our food and where it comes from, and to teach a way of eating that prioritises the environment without sacrificing pleasure, and flavour. To do this he’s developed an approach of "Root to Fruit" eating which is a guide on how we can all support a better, fairer food system by the way we shop, cook and eat.
Tom has just published his second book Eating for Pleasure, People and Planet, which is really a culmination of his work in this space. So much more than a recipe book, it’s a modern guide on how to cook, shop and eat in today’s world. It’s a celebration of food, how it’s grown, the farmers who grow it, and how we can all make small changes to eat in way that’s good for us, that’s good for our environment and that’s ultimately delicious.
I headed over to Tom’s for coffee and a chat. We talk about his new book, his whole approach to food, and his background and why he became a chef on a mission...