Herald on Sunday

CHEF SWALLOWS HIS FEARS

MasterChef judge learns a thing or two in Asia, writes

- Stephanie Holmes.

John Torode has the best job in the world. Not only does he get to eat for a living, he gets to do it in far-flung locations around the world.

“I think I’m a pretty lucky boy really,” he says with a laugh, talking to Sunday Travel on the phone from his home in London on a particular­ly cold winter’s evening. “You put a wishlist together of things you’d like to do and then somebody says you can do all of them, all at the same time. It turns out pretty okay really.”

As well as serving as a long-time judge on MasterChef UK, Australian-born, Britishbas­ed Torode has also made several travel shows where he explores culinary delights around the world. Previous series have seen him visit Australia, Argentina and Malaysia, but this time he’s taking on a whole continent. Over 10 episodes, John Torode’s

Asia takes the chef to locations in China, Thailand, the Maldives and gives him his first-ever visit to India — a place he admits he was a little hesitant about.

“I was always quite scared of India and I don’t know why. I’ve always loved Asia, as in China and Thailand and Vietnam and places like that. But India I’ve always found a bit frightenin­g.”

Thankfully, his fears were unfounded.

“It was the most amazing experience ever,” he says.

“India is one of those places where you realise that food is so appreciate­d and because food is so appreciate­d, then of course people care for it so much more and it’s not just a throwaway thing.”

He visits Mumbai, where he eats street food, learns the secrets of the Tiffin Tin and how to make smoked lamb samosas. In Amritsar he visits Sikh pilgrimage site the Golden Temple, where free meals are provided for up to 100,000 people a day. On Torode’s visit, it was just 60,000.

“It was probably one of the most enlighteni­ng places I’ve been in my life. There’s so many people there being fed on a daily basis for free . . . I cooked a ton of rice in four different pots. It’s astounding numbers but also the fact that it’s all done for absolutely nothing is quite incredible.” Every part of the journey was a learning experience for Torode, something he values above all else.

“If I went half a day without learning something, I’d be pretty disappoint­ed. I remember my father saying to me, ‘at the end of the day when you get home if you ask yourself what you’ve learned, and you’ve learnt nothing for a day, your day is a waste’.

“I look at it now, I learnt so much on that journey, about people, about things, about history, about spice, about food, and also just about the way in which we consider other countries and how we feel about them.

“We look on them as places that are exotic, and they look on themselves as being quite mundane.”

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 ??  ?? Torode samples street food in Mumbai; below, at Amritsar.
Torode samples street food in Mumbai; below, at Amritsar.

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