Caterersearch.com 100: Brett Graham
Overall ranking: 85
Chef ranking: 25
Brett Graham - Snapshot
Brett Graham is the chef-patron of two-Michelin-starred London restaurant the www.caterersearch.com/Articles/Article.aspx?liArticleID=334097">http://www.caterersearch.com/Articles/Article.aspx?liArticleID=334097" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer">Ledbury](http://www.theledbury.com). He also co-owns and oversees Michelin-starred pub the [Harwood Arms](http://www.harwoodarms.com/) in Fulham.
Brett Graham - Career guide
Graham was born in 1979 in Newcastle, New South Wales, and grew up on his grandfather's farm. His first job was an apprenticeship at a local fish restaurant called Scratchleys before he moved to Sydney at the age of 18 to take up a job with Irish chef Liam Tomlins at his new restaurant Banc. His big break arrived when he won Australia's coveted Josephine Pignolet cookery award as Sydney's best young chef, and the prize of a flight to London brought him to the UK in 2000. He secured a job at the Square under Phil Howard and stayed there for three-and-a-half years, during which time he gained further recognition by winning the Restaurant Association's Young Chef of the Year title.
In 2005, aged just 26, Howard and business partner Nigel Platts-Martin gave Graham the opportunity to open his own restaurant, the Ledbury in Notting Hill. After opening to rave reviews, the site gained its first Michelin star within a year, and added a second in 2010.
In late 2008 Graham opened Fulham gastropub the Harwood Arms with TV chef Mike Robinson and publican Edwin Vaux. With ex-Ledbury chef Stephen Williams in the kitchen, it opened to wide acclaim and, in 2010, became the first London pub to win a Michelin star.
Brett Graham - What we think
Graham's meteoric rise to the upper echelons of the London dining scene has as much to do with his natural talent in the kitchen as to the assured guidance of mentors such as Phil Howard.
To get through the pressures of opening a fine-dining restaurant aged 26, only five years after arriving in the country, he needed reserves of power as well as all the advice he could absorb from Howard's and Platts-Martin's lengthy experience.
"It was incredibly tough, both physically and mentally. Never having been a head chef before and suddenly having the responsibility of running a restaurant was very hard. What I found the most difficult was that people are so quick to knock you. Of five great reviews and one bad one, you only remember the bad one, and I took that quite hard because I felt like we were failing," Graham told Caterer in early 2010.
Under the steady eyes of Howard and Platts-Martin, Graham grew into the role, and quickly paid back much of the faith shown in him by earning a Michelin star within a year of the Ledbury opening.
Graham's modern French cuisine adheres to the same strict principles of seasonality as his mentor Howard's and is rooted in classical principles with just the odd progressive technique or exotic ingredient.
Despite being tipped as a second star rising in the 2009 Michelin guide, Graham was nevertheless shocked to be immediately promoted to two full stars the following year: "It was amazing that we got to rising two-stars, and I thought that this was our limit and that we'd sit there for a few years," he told Caterer.
Brett Graham - Further information
Aussie rules: Interview with two-Michelin starred chef Brett Grahame >>
Menuwatch: The Harwood Arms >>
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