The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Waiter, waiter, there’s an ant in my salad...

Yeah, don’t worry... MasterChef Gary says it tastes like lemons

- By Beverley Lyons mail@sundaypost.com

STAR chef Gary Maclean has a skin-crawling secret – he used ants in a salad when he couldn’t find a lemon.

MasterChef: The Profession­als winner Gary revealed he added the creepy crawlies to the dish as they have a citrus flavour.

The 45- year- old’s stomach- churning admission makes the furore around Mary Berry’s cream-in-her-spag-bol clanger seem like small fry.

Gary – a lecturer at City Of Glasgow C College in Glasgow – said: “When I was in N Norway I was using ants to cook with and it was amazing.

“I was at a three-Michelin-star restaurant and had to cook with food that was indigenous to Norway. They had no lemon, no olive oil, no Parmesan and we had to find substitute­s.

“Ants substitute lemon and they had some frozen ants for me to cook with in a little plastic container. You just put them in. Who is to say it’s bad?

“I quite like the fact we were using ants because we had a reason. We weren’t trying to be novel. We needed to find something citrusy and that’s what we used.”

Last week, former Bake Off judge Mary Berry sparked a culinary debate when she revealed she puts cream in her spaghetti bolognese.

But married dad-of-five Gary, whose Scots lobster bisque was described by show judge Greg Wallace as the best he’d ever tasted, thinks people shouldn’t get hung up on ingredient­s.

And if that means wolfing handfuls of insects and grubs, so be it.

“Some people are doing insect restaurant­s,” he said. “There is a big insect revolution going on and people see it as natural to use them in cooking. In South America in particular, they use loads of them and it’s part of their culture.

“They look at us using prawns the same as them eating insects. They find it quite bizarre we use a scavenger from the sea. They say insects are the next big protein.” Since winning MasterChef: The Profession­als in December,cooking up a Gary storm. has been

He’s been asked to guest lecture, guest cook and devise menus for leading companies such as Glasgow restaurant and culinary landmark Bella Napoli, which is relaunchin­g as Oro on March 23.

It’ll launch with a gala evening and meal hand-cooked by Gary.

“I won’t be cooking with insects for Oro,” he joked.

“I’ve always been passionate about Italian food and a lot of the cuisine is very much part of Scotland too.

“We’re doing an interpreta­tion of the rabbit I cooked on the show on the night.

“The reason I did it on the show is probably because it’s the most difficult meat to cook so we’re going to replicate it for 140 people.

“There are a few other surprises in store, too. It’s already sold out but it lets people taste the kind of food they see being made on TV.”

Gary, who has been cooking for 30 years and has travelled internatio­nally to take part in different competitio­ns, said he’s relishing the new challenges he’s been given but he’s not letting it go to his head.

“I never feel rock-star about it because I’m too long in the tooth,” he says. “I’ve always cooked.”

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Mary found herself in a pickle.
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