Paul Welburn leaves Tonic and Remedy to pursue new project
After opening Tonic and Remedy six months ago, Paul Welburn has decided he's ready for a new challenge and will be leaving London to head up The Leconfield in Petworth, West Sussex.
He added: "Tonic and Remedy has been a great opening but I've always been itching to get out of London and into an independent restaurant where I can control it and bring something quite special to the area."
Paul started his career at The Star Inn in Harome before deciding he wanted to be in London and taking up a position with Gary Rhodes. He gained his first star at Rhodes W1, where he had started as a sous chef and eight months later the restaurant was awarded it's Michelin star, Paul took over and kept the star for seven years. As well as being a Michelin-starred chef he's also tried his hand at TV, taking part in BBC's Great British Menu last year. He feels his latest move will bring him full circle.
>>> Read more on Paul Welburn here
"When I first became a chef I worked with Andrew Pern at The Star Inn and he really grounded me about what this industry is about," explained Paul. "Working for him, the restaurant was very local and there was a real sense of community but people also came there for a reason which was the great food. That's where I want to get to with The Leconfield. So it's like going full cicle - working for someone, not a big company."
Just down the road is Tom Seller's pub The Lickfold Inn and Paul is hoping he too can be as successful with this food driven venture.
>>> Read: Tom Sellers to re-open The Lickfold Inn
He said: "It's going to be a long project, I've got so many ideas and I really want to tap into all the awards. It has one rosette and I want to push for three - and who knows maybe push into the Michelin Guide!
"I want to bring the restaurant back to being very British, local and humble. Down the line if we can grow our own produce that would be fantastic and there's room to have a charcuterie. It's going to take a bit of time to change the concept, at the minute the menu is very Mediterranean and it doesn't fit the area, the restauarant or the layout. I want to bring it back to something everyone can buy into - I want the locals but I want it to be a destination restaurant too."
He added: "I'm going to be changing about 90 per cent of everything in there and I'll be bringing a few of my own team in. The restaurant itself is fantastic and beautiful, it just hasn't had the direction it needs on menu concepts, plans, team training - the whole thing."
"It's a really exciting project and I want to bring my style of food which is humble and natural to the area. I'm just itching to get going!"
By Cara Pilkington
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