Bath Chronicle

Joe Wick’s recipes

The Body Coach is back - this time with a batch of 30-minute recipes. Joe Wicks talks to Lauren Taylor about life lately and what the new book is all about.

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AS bestsellin­g cookbook authors go, Joe Wicks is a bit of an anomaly. He’s not had any profession­al chef training, never even worked in a kitchen – and in fact only learned how to cook a steak medium-rare a couple of years ago. Yet he’s just released his sixth recipe collection, Joe’s 30-Minute Meals, and has the UK’S second bestsellin­g cookbook in history under his belt (Jamie Oliver holds the top spot), overtaking many Michelin-starred and celebrity TV chefs. So how has he done it? A thoroughly modern star, Joe built his empire through social media, posting short videos of himself working out, or throwing his healthy dinners together. His chirpy personalit­y, along with his trademark style of shouting the ingredient­s as he throws them in, has helped the PT with gravity defying curls gain an audience of 2.3 million on Instagram as The Body Coach. Joe’s latest book sees him move from ‘Lean in 15’ to meals that take double that time but are still quick and easy, and show off what he says is the evolution of his own learnings in the kitchen. “I’ve kind of progressed a bit as a cook [he won’t call himself a chef ] and I wanted to introduce recipes I’m enjoying now, things I’d have never cooked once.” he says Joe was brought up on frozen chicken nuggets and fish fingers and it wasn’t until his 20s that he got into cooking, alongside his love of fitness. “Once I started to cook healthy food, I realised how good it made me feel,” he says – and even now, he’s still picking up new skills. “I’m learning to use new spices and flavours but keeping it all simple, so I still believe, every recipe in here, everyone can do.”

Speed and ease

He describes his latest book as “a bit more grown-up”, written with whole households in mind. The 30-minute meal concept has, of course, been done before, but fast, easy healthy meals was a trend Joe helped grow in the online world, when Instagram first took off. “There was never a strategy, I just realised people wanted speed, and quick and fun, so I made it simple because I was learning as I went. Not that success came overnight, and he acknowledg­es he captured his audience at just the right moment. “It’s taken years of [building] trust and giving out all this content. If I started today with my Instagram, with the same idea, exactly the same personalit­y, I would have nowhere near the success I’ve had,” he reflects. “I had a good idea, at the right time.”

The carb factor

The new book is split into sections: all-day breakfast, chicken, fish and seafood, pork, beef and lamb, and sweet treats, and includes recipes you might not expect in a ‘healthy cookbook,’ like ‘banging’ chicken balti and sausage and mushroom pie. Each recipe is marked either ‘reducedcar­b’ (higher in fat and protein) or ‘carb refuel’ (lower in fat, higher in carbs), a concept Joe’s fans will be familiar with. The idea is that you eat the former on days when you do less activity, and the latter after a workout: “Your muscles enjoy that refuel process.” But Joe isn’t militant about it. “You could have carbs every day with all your meals, as long as you’re in a slight energy deficit and you’re burning more than you’re consuming.”

Forget calories

“My biggest criticism from anyone – I always get stick from personal trainers – is always the fact that I don’t list calories and macros [macronutri­ents]. I’ll always stand by it – I don’t believe in calorie counting. I don’t think it’s a healthy relationsh­ip to have with food. “Back in the day, before we understood what calories were, we were fine! We ate intuitivel­y, we exercised.” he adds. “People like realistic, they like having a treat and not feeling bad. If you ate a little bit more food today, that’s fine – get up and have a workout, and be a bit more sensible tomorrow. There’s no perfect day.”

Exercise Body Coach-style

Ease and speed is Joe’s mantra when it comes to exercise too, his advice is to do four or five quick workouts a week (he prefers to train fasted in the morning). “I believe in home workouts and home cooking,” he says. “You can join a gym, pay £100 a month or get a trainer, it’ll motivate you for a little while but it ain’t going to help you when it’s freezing cold and it’s snowing and you don’t want to leave the house.” In a world of clean eating, meal replacemen­t shakes and keto diets, it’s simple, sensible stuff – and it’s that kind of straight-talking that got me doing a Wicks HIIT workout later that day, after our interview, in front of the telly.

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