Manchester Evening News

ELLA WALKER

ON THE RELEASE OF HIS NEW DIABETES COOKBOOK, CHEF AND TV HOST PHIL VICKERY TALKS TO ABOUT LOCKDOWN, COOKING FOR ONE AND CHILLI DORITOS

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other day,” he breaks off enthusiast­ically, “some swordfish! It was delicious.

“So it’s nice to have nice food and not have to worry about, ‘Oh I don’t eat this’, ‘Can I have a bit of that?’, or, ‘I don’t like pepper’,” he continues, adding with an affectiona­te laugh: “One of my sons can spot a bit of spinach or some speckled black pepper on pasta at 500 yards.”

Phil is currently celebratin­g the release of his latest cookbook, Diabetes Meal Planner, written with food scientist Bea Harling BSc. Every recipe is checked rigorously by Diabetes UK too, even “down to half grams” of things like salt, fat and sugar.

“They are very, very sharp people and quite particular,” says Phil of his collaborat­ors, describing how scrupulous and complex the recipe-writing process was – so much so, he says with a laugh, the team had no qualms about knocking recipes back to him, until they were exactly right.

And while his younger self might have jostled against such restrictio­n, for Phil now, after years of experience writing gluten-free and diabetes recipes, it instead provides a framework in which to be imaginativ­e and “box a bit clever”. Like his approach to getting “flavour out of things without the salt – through vinegars, spices like fenugreek, cumin, smoked paprika”, which he uses “as condiments”.

“Match those with acids, soft herbs,” he says, “it’s actually quite interestin­g.”

He may write scientific­ally robust, healthy cookery books, but that doesn’t mean he’s averse to the odd bag of crisps.

“What I adore is chilli flavoured Doritos,” he says.

“My weakness at the moment is clotted cream, Rodda’s,” as well as “a bit of Bombay mix with my glass of wine.”

And his top tip, if you can get it, is to nab a Waitrose cherry Madeira. “It’s the best cake on the market,” he says exuberantl­y. “It’s very good.”

For many, Phil is as beloved for This Morning as he is for starring in the original incarnatio­n of Ready, Steady, Cook.

“It was fun, I think cooking has become very serious on television [since], but good old Rylan, love him,” he says of the 2020 reboot. “I haven’t seen it, and I think there’s a gap there [for it] certainly.”

He was also a restaurant chef for two decades, until 1999, earning a Michelin star at The Castle Hotel, Taunton. Does he miss the clatter and heat of cooking in restaurant­s? “Absolutely not,” he says, relief in his voice. “[Working] every Christmas Day, every New Year’s Eve, New Year’s Day, every birthday, every holiday... and my hand was slightly forced at the time when I came out of it, but looking back, it was fabulous. But there’s absolutely no way I would do it again. It took me about five years to get out of that routine.”

With two 20-year careers, a slew of cookbooks and good health under his belt, what comes next, he’s not entirely sure. Happily though, he’s “more relaxed” these days, and not fazed by the idea of entering his seventh decade (he’s rather excited about the free bus pass).

“It’s time now...” he muses. “Next chapter, next chapter.”

■ Diabetes Meal Planner by Phil Vickery with Bea Harling BSc, photograph­y by Kate Whitaker, is published by Kyle Books and supported by Diabetes UK, priced £22.

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