James Tanner

James Tanner (born 1976) is an English chef and television personality, best known for co-owning the Tanners Restaurant in Plymouth and cooking on various TV programmes.

James Tanner
Born1976 (age 4344)
Tunbridge Wells, Kent
ChildrenMegan Tanner (b. 2006)
Culinary career

In 1999, Tanner and his brother Chris set up Tanners Restaurant in Plymouth. Since then, he has appeared on the BBC cookery programme Ready Steady Cook and more recently the ITV Breakfast programme Lorraine.[1]

Early life

The third of four brothers, Tanner was born in Maidstone, Kent.

Tanner began his catering career, preparing salads and starters, in "Brookers Oast" a Whitbread Brewers Fayre in Kent in the early 1990s After studying hotel management[2] he worked in the kitchens of several restaurants, often with his older brother, fellow celebrity chef Chris Tanner.[3] Tanner worked his way up through the ranks until he was invited by the Roux brothers, Michel and Albert, to move to the US[4] and work in upstate New York, where he was Chef de partie at the Lake Placid Lodge. Within four months, he was promoted to junior Sous-chef.[2]

Career

Tanners Restaurant opened in Prysten House in Plymouth in 1999

Tanner worked his way up the ranks and on returning to England took a job under Martin Blunos at the two Michelin-starred restaurant Lettonie in Bath before a Head Chef role at Right on the Green in Kent.[2]

In 1999, aged 23, Tanner and his brother opened Tanners Restaurant in Plymouth.[5][6] The restaurant closed in October 2014.[7]

The Barbican Kitchen opened in the Plymouth Gin Distillery in 2006

In Spring 2006, the Tanner brothers opened a second restaurant in Plymouth, The Barbican Kitchen, a brasserie sited within the Plymouth Gin Distillery, a 500-year-old building in the heart of Plymouth's oldest area, The Barbican.[8]

In 2007, the Tanner brothers were awarded Honorary Doctorate of Arts from Plymouth University. In April 2011, the Tanner brothers opened The Kitchen Cafe, serving snack style foods as an offshoot from the brasserie style cuisine.[9]

In May 2014, the brothers opened a pub called The Kentish Hare in Bidborough in Kent.[10] In 2015, they opened a fish and chip restaurant, Catch, in Looe in Cornwall.

Television

Tanner's television career began in 2002 when he and his brother made their first TV appearance on a competition called Chef Stars, a promotion run by UKTV Food and broadcast predominantly on their now cancelled Great Food Live. The brothers, however, did not make it through to the final.

James Tanner (right) with Ainsley Harriott and Lesley Waters on set of Ready Steady Cook in 2004

Tanner became a semi-regular guest on Great Food Live which was shot at the same studios as Ready Steady Cook. He was recommended to audition for the show and became a regular. At the heart of his style during his TV appearances is the repetition of his catchphrase "like so", used to make various culinary techniques seem easy, encouraging members of the public to give them a try, and also to assuage viewers' fears of unfamiliar ingredients, as well as "dig down deep".

He appeared in the 2009 series Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is: Food. From 2010 until 2017, Tanner was a regular chef on the ITV Breakfast programme Lorraine.

Tanner has occasionally appeared on Saturday Kitchen.[2] He made regular appearances in Country House Sunday as well as a few appearances on ITV's Saturday Cookbook and The Munch Box. In 2019 Tanner appeared as a chef on Channel 4's Beat the Chef

Books

  • For Chocolate Lovers – Published 5 October 2006, co-written by Chris Tanner
  • Ice Cream – Published 25 March 2008, co-written by Chris Tanner
  • James Tanner Takes 5: Delicious Dishes Using Just 5 Ingredients – Published 30 September 2010
  • Old Favourites, New Twists: 100 classic recipes with a difference – Published 11 July 2013

Personal life

Tanner has one daughter, Megan.

gollark: Does Islam *say* that or is that just convention accreted around it?
gollark: A virtualized network running atop existing networks.
gollark: Well, you could implement that as an overlay network if you thought it was good?
gollark: Routing is handled according to normal IP. RFC 1149 is merely a transport.
gollark: There are some store and forward protocols which are sort of that.

References

  1. Find out more about James Tanner | Presenters & Experts | Lorraine ITV1 Archived 25 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "BBC Biography". BBC. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
  3. "Chefs of the future cook up a storm". The Herald. 21 June 2008. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
  4. "Brothers' fine food oasis". Europe Intelligence Wire. 19 March 2005. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
  5. "Flavour fest puts top chefs to test". Europe Intelligence Wire. 19 August 2004. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
  6. "James Tanner at the Nottingham Food and Drink Festival". Nottingham Evening Post. 11 September 2009. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
  7. https://www.thecaterer.com/articles/353838/tanners-in-plymouth-sold
  8. Plymouth Young Chamber – Sponsor – James Tanner of Tanners Restaurant and the Barbican Kitchen Archived 24 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  9. Tanners, Plymouth | The staff Canteen
  10. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 5 April 2014. Retrieved 5 April 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.