The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

‘People only saw me as an aggressive, shouty chef, but I’m really a nice person’

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HE runs three top restaurant­s, holds two Michelin stars and is the judge on TV’s toughest cookery show MasterChef: The Profession­als.

But Marcus Wareing has told iN10 about his fears of somehow messing up everything he has achieved.

He still credits his dad’s drive and wise words for pushing him to become one of Britain’s top chefs and also for guiding him to become a happily-married dad-of-three.

Marcus was just 18 when dad Raymond put him on a train at Southport to become a commis chef at London’s Savoy Hotel.

“I had no thoughts of grandeur or book-writing, being on TV or even having my own restaurant,” said Marcus, 47, speaking ahead of this week’s MasterChef final.

“I was naïve and a little bit wet behind the ears but full of the common sense my dad gave me.

“It wasn’t about how good you were at maths or English, it was about logical thinking and not being stupid.

“There was a lot of fear – I was going to one of the biggest hotels in the world and I was a kid being left on my own to live in London, a city none of my family had ever been to.”

As a kid, Marcus worked at the fruit and potato merchant’s business his dad ran in his home town. He may now have three of London’s most salubrious restaurant­s and a supersmart house in trendy Wimbledon, but his affection for those early days is evident.

“I finished school at 3pm and was in the warehouse at 3.30pm. I was there until as late as I was allowed.

“The only things in my life were working and boxing. Sometimes on a Friday I’d go down after school and not get home until Saturday evening.

“I’d kip on the couch at my nan’s house, which was at the warehouse.

“My dad would be there through the night and there’s a work ethic of pure graft that’s ingrained in me.

“I loved the whole thing. I was in wagons with men smoking and telling dirty jokes. It was fantastic, much more exciting than hanging out with other 10 and 11-year-olds.”

Marcus’s star rose at a dizzying pace when he moved to London. He worked with and learned from some of the most respected names in the culinary world.

Ask him to name inspiratio­ns and Anton Edelman, Albert Roux, Michel

Marcus says MasterChef (above, left) came just at the right time for him, after his early career with Gordon Ramsay ended in acrimony (above, right). However, wife Jane (right) has always been ‘his rock’. Roux Jr and Gordon Ramsay are just a few that trip off the tongue.

He was closest of all to Ramsay but a bitter fallout between the pair resulted in a legal battle. So, what’s their relationsh­ip like now?

“I don’t have a relationsh­ip with Gordon but I have the utmost respect for him as a man and as a friend as we were,” says Marcus.

“I admire his business ambition. He’s had a lot of ups and downs and has always managed to steady the ship.

“He’s done a lot for me. Moving on isn’t always a bad thing. There are some people who want to do their own thing and I was one of them.

“I never realised it would happen the way it did. I thought we’d cook and run restaurant­s together for the rest of our lives, but it didn’t work.

“But the time we were together was brilliant. I wouldn’t change it.”

Marcus cites the face-to-face, plate-by-plate, years with Ramsay as among his best. Like the famously fiery Ramsay, Marcus has that mercurial chef’s mentality.

If you couldn’t stand the heat in those days, a Wareing kitchen was not the place to be. Things, he insists, have changed. “There were days when I crossed the line,” admits Marcus, frankly. “Sometimes I look back in anger at my ability to control my position.

“The hardest part of being a chef is being a manager and learning to respect other people’s feelings.

“Having a Michelin star at 25 and running a partnershi­p with a firecracke­r like Gordon who was so motivated to get to the top was all about driving very hard.

“People couldn’t always keep up and you’d look at them as being weak. That was very wrong.

“Maybe it’s something to put down to youth and naivety.”

The two Michelin-starred Marcus, The Gilbert Scott and Tredwells are the three restaurant­s Marcus runs.

But he’s allowed his head chefs to step up and that’s afforded the time to devote to his TV career, especially MasterChef.

He still remembers reading a report about Michel Roux Jr leaving and thinking that every top chef in the country would do anything to step into his shoes.

What he didn’t expect was the phone call saying he was the man at the top of their wish list. “I was bowled over,” he admits. “I was honoured that they could see that this young, fiery chef could fit into this mould.

“People only ever used to see me as an aggressive chef who used to shout at people.

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