Border Telegraph

Food expert Adam Richman praises the UK’s cuisine

The TV host is making his way across Britain, with a map in hand, in order to sample its culinary delights

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Renowned for his passion for food and appetite for outrageous eating feats, Man v Food star Adam Richman has embarked on a culinary journey across the British Isles – “as a love letter” to British cuisine.

Armed with a map of the UK, the Brooklyn-based food expert and chef is attempting to shed light on the “globally misunderst­ood” and “unfairly maligned” realm of British cuisine – for a new Food Network UK show, Adam Richman Eats Britain.

“I think globally British food is largely misunderst­ood and maybe unfairly maligned. We acknowledg­e Spain’s impact on food, Japan’s impact on food, Italy’s impact on food – all of which are profound – but people slag off Britain,” says the 49-year-old.

“Then you stop and you go, the sandwich has roots here, Cheddar has roots here, Angus beef has roots in Britain. So, what’s cool is using this sort of map as my menu, as a device, and saying, ‘I’m going to go to Melton Mowbray for Melton Mowbray pie, or Bakewell for a Bakewell tart’.”

During his travels, Richman shares the culinary treasures he unearths with his audience.

He says: “In this little town called

Langport, in Somerset, I had a quiche that is arguably in the top ten foods I’ve eaten in my lifetime, made by a woman named Mel and her two daughters in a bakery.”

As a first-generation immigrant in America, Richman celebrated Britain’s culinary diversity, praising the abundance of South Asian, African, and West Indian foods available on the island, saying: “I hope I was able to elevate those voices.

“Because let’s be honest, any country with an imperial past is usually telling the story of white people. I’m not pandering, but it’s just the truth.

“There is a vibrant food culture here, and it is not just boiled, fried, salty, butter. The South Asian and African communitie­s that have settled in Britain have changed the game.

“My friend from Romford can order

Indian food with the mellifluou­sness of a traveller who went to Mumbai. You can go to Peckham in south London and have incredible Nigerian food, go to Brixton and have breathtaki­ng Jamaican food.”

“So we give homage and we give love to Cheddar in Cheddar Gorge, or the Whitstable oyster in Whitstable, but how cool is it to then go Kent, and discover it’s more than that. Kent is more than having a sandwich in Sandwich (town), which was dope, but still, there are more stories to tell.”

The television host was blown away by egusi stew and tapé tapé plantain, a Cameroonia­n dish he tried in Derbyshire, describing it as one of his favourites on the show.

Richman says: “A Cameroonia­n chef named Stella blew my mind with a Cameroonia­n dish. I know a decent amount about some African dishes.

“To have egusi stew and tapé tapé plantain in the middle of a rainy day in Derbyshire was amazing.”

Richman praised the resilience of the British hospitalit­y industry after facing the challenges posed by the Covid-19 pandemic, highlighti­ng the success of food establishm­ents that have thrived despite setbacks.

“We film in Manchester with a Brazilian couple who started making viennoiser­ie pastries out of their apartment, and now they’ve moved to brick and mortar,” he says.

He added one of the “big difference­s” between American and British food is “there is almost an insistence on local ingredient­s used in England that is not very pervasive in America”.

“We were in Hucklow, in Derbyshire, at a place called The Blind Bull, and the grouse were shot locally, the potatoes were local, the onions were local,” he says.

“At The Potted Pig in Cardiff, I had the best rabbit of my life – you can just bury me in this cheese sauce. The chef uses local beer, local leeks, local bread. I think in the small towns, to a certain extent, there’s a greater emphasis on eating local than there is in small town America, because of economic inequality.”

Adam Richman Eats Britain is available on the Food Network and to stream on Discovery Plus.

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