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Craft Guild’s Young National Chef of the Year is opened up to more stars in the making

8th Mar 2013 - 16:00
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Organisers of the Young National Chef of the Year competition have confirmed that this year’s contest is being opened up to more chefs who have demonstrated culinary excellence.

The Craft Guild of Chefs competition, in partnership with Unilever Food Solutions’ leading brand Knorr, sits alongside the National Chef of The Year and will include semi-final heats for the first time since the title was launched four years ago.

Previously, eight winners of some of the biggest competitions for young chefs were automatically selected by the Guild to qualify for a place in the final at the Restaurant Show. This year, four chefs aged 18-23 will automatically win a seeded place and will be made up of winners of young chef competitions from the British Culinary Federation, the Academy of Culinary Arts Awards of Excellence, North West Young Chef of the Year and WorldSkills.

The remaining four will be made up of the winners of two semi-finals to which up to 20 young chefs from industry-wide competitions will be invited to compete. These include the Craft Guild’s Graduate Awards, Young Welsh and Scottish Chefs of the Year, Chaine des Rotisseurs Young Chef, to name just a few.

The semi-finals will be held at Sheffield College on June 18 and at the University of West London on July 2 to coincide with the National Chef of the Year semi-finals.

David Mulcahy, competition organiser and Craft Guild vice president, said the new format was inevitable as more organisations got to hear about the competition.

“When we first launched the title, we selected winners of eight of the biggest competitions in the UK to build up interest and give us the chance to work more closely with associations and groups and their individual events,” he said. “Last year, however, regional development agencies and other bodies started asking if they could get involved.

“By working with Knorr and holding two semi-finals with up to 20 young chefs getting the chance to compete, we are able to open up the competition to more of the UK’s emerging culinary stars.”

UFS category marketing director Stefan Horsnell said: “In a monumental year where Knorr celebrates its 175th anniversary, we’re putting the rising stars of our industry firmly in the spotlight by making this year’s Young National Chef of the Year competition the biggest and best yet.

“Knorr has injected a huge investment into this year’s competition to really set it aside from any other in the industry and position it as the young chef competition to win. As the prelude to the prestigious National Chef of the Year competition, we want to work with the Craft Guild to create a competition stage that will rival some of the best in world.”

Mark Sargeant, National Chef of the Year in 2006, has been lined up as the competition’s ambassador. Sargeant, formerly head chef at Gordon Ramsay’s Michelin-starred restaurant at Claridge’s and now proprietor of the Rocksalt Restaurant in Folkestone, Kent, has presented TV shows including ITV’s Saturday Cookbook and is sure to be a hit with aspiring young chefs.

As well as national acclaim, Young National Chef of the Year 2013 will receive an impressive package of prizes. For example, 2012 winner Ben Murphy, who at the time worked at Koffmann’s in Knightsbridge, London, won a study trip to The Lodge on Loch Goil, an exclusive five star culinary experience courtesy of Lockhart Catering and Churchill. He has since travelled to France to learn more skills there.

This year’s winner will be revealed at an awards ceremony following the final at the Restaurant Show on Tuesday, October 8.

Written by
PSC Team