Great British Menu 2021 chefs: Amy Elles, Scotland heat
chef owner of The Harbour Café and founder of Stocks Events Amy ElLes is one of four chefs Competing for Scotland on Great British Menu 2021.
Series 16 of the competition starts on Wednesday 24th March on BBC Two at 8pm. The Scotland heat is airing on Wednesday 31st March, Thursday 1st April and Friday 2nd April.
For the Scotland heat, host Andi Oliver is joined by veteran chef and judge Tom Brown.
Amy competed against chef and owner of Edinburgh's the Little Chartroom, Roberta Hall-McCarron; chef owner of Aizle and Noto, Stuart Ralston, and Scott Smith, the chef and owner of Edinburgh's Fhior. As per the programme's new format, was eliminated after the fish course after scoring fewer points than her three adversaries.
Biography
The London-born chef started cooking professionally at Harrods and honed her skills at The Fat Duck, as well as at the London Exmouth Market Moorish restaurant Moro, where Carousel co-founder Ollie Templeton also trained.
Amy and her family eventually moved to Fife on Scotland’s East Coast, where she and her husband set up a private event catering company, Stocks Events, and their own restaurant, The Harbour Café.
As one might expect of a highly-trained chef living in Scotland, Amy uses the best of what the country has to offer in terms of ingredients, letting them shine without too much fuss or complication.
Amy appeared on The Great British Menu in 2020, where she cooked dishes inspired by Harry Potter, Abi Elphinstone's 'The Dreamsnatcher' and Peter Pan.
Even though she didn't make it through to represent her region in the finals, her 'Desperate Dan' comic magazine-inspired 'Cow Pie' dish was called banquet-worthy by the judges, and prompted calls for her to give the competition another shot in 2021.
Full name
Amy Rebecca Elles
Nickname
Ames
Age/DOB
05/10/79
Place of birth / residence
I’m from Finchley, North London, and now live in Elie, Fife.
Relationship status / children
I am married with three children two dogs and one cat.
Height
5ft3
Type of chef (restaurant, hotel, development chef, etc.)
Restaurant
Favourite type of cuisine
Not really, perhaps more Spanish
Path to becoming a chef
Old school day release from Harrods and going to Westminster College
Past and present place of work
Harrods, The Grove, The Fat Duck, Moro, Casa Marcelo (1* Santiago de Compostella), private chef in ski seasons and Scottish lodges, Corfu and London caterers the A.C and Mustards. Started our own business, The Laughing Stock (event street food) in 2008, Stocks Events (private caterers) a couple of years later and then The Harbour Café a couple of years ago.
Personal and professional mentors / role models
I take advice from a close circle of family and friends.
Guilty pleasure dish
Pork gyoza with tons of ginger vinegar.
Best / worst thing about being a chef
Unsociable hours are the worst, everything else is the best.
FeeEings stepping onto the GBM set
Pretty cool and very funny.
Thoughts about the 'British Innovation' theme this year
Challenging at first, but something to get your teeth into!
Plans for the future
Always plans for the future... Watch this space
Dishes
Starter
Amy's starter, 'The Birds and the Bees,' was inspired by Mary Stopes, who fought for women's right to contraception in the early 20th century and co-founded London's first birth control clinic.
It consisted of Ras-El-Hanout quail crowns, sweetcorn custard, dates and a honey tuile, and Tom Brown gave it a score of 6/10.
Fish course
For her fish course, 'Nature;s Fingerprints,' an ode to forensic research pioneer Henry Faulds, Amy served John Dory with chilli sauce, beetroot carpaccio, squid and garlic potatoes, scoring a 7/10.
{{user.name}}