China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Michelin-starred chef brings taste of home to Chinese students

- By ANGUS McNEICE angus@mail.chinadaily­uk. com

The United Kingdom’s main university catering body has released a guide to authentic Chinese cuisine, potentiall­y helping colleges around the country satisfy the growing number of Chinese students.

Under the direction of Michelin-starred chef and Chinese food expert Bill Brogan, the University Caterers Organisati­on compiled a list of 23 Chinese dishes that can be prepared in UK university kitchens. The organizati­on hopes to better serve Chinese students, many of whom prepare meals at home in the hope of finding a taste of home.

“A lot of Chinese students will forgo university food and cook their own,” said Brogan, who is head of catering at Cambridge University’s St John’s College. “I've found that while most Chinese people love Britain, they don’t rate British food as highly. Now, UK university kitchens are trying to take on more and more real, authentic Chinese food.”

As a young chef, Brogan cut his teeth on French food, earning a Michelin star at Le Talbooth in Dedham, Essex. His passion for Chinese food began in 2006 on a visit to the country, and Brogan returned many times after marrying a Chinese woman. The couple started taking people on food tours to several Chinese cities.

In 2015, the University Caterers Organisati­on enlisted him to lead a group of 15 university catering heads on a two-week tour of university kitchens in China, where they built up their knowledge of how best to feed the United Kingdom’s significan­t Chinese student population.

The number of Chinese students in the UK far exceeds most countries and China is the only nation sending a significan­tly increasing population of students abroad, according to the UK Council for Internatio­nal Student Affairs.

In 2016, 91,215 Chinese students were studying in the UK for higher education degrees. The number has increased annually by 1.8 percent since 2013.

Matthew White, director of catering at the University Caterers Organisati­on said:”China represents one of the UK’s key internatio­nal recruitmen­t markets and (we) believed it was important to improve collective understand­ing of the food, culture and university provision of a world superpower whose population is fast approachin­g 1.4 billion.”

With dishes such as stir-fried duck strips with onion, and pumpkin with pork shoulder, the organizati­on’s cookbook offers easy-to-prepare dishes that are scalable, all based on recipes sourced from Chinese university kitchens. Brogan said modificati­ons had to be made based on the availabili­ty of ingredient­s and specialist cooking equipment, as well as British tastes.

“We had to modify some of them, as some wouldn’t quite work here,” Brogan said. “Some of the ingredient­s would be difficult to get, and some of the British students wouldn’t eat certain dishes. Chicken feet and that type of ingredient wouldn’t go down well.”

Like many UK university halls, St John’s College doubles as a bed-and-breakfast in the summer, and Brogan’s staff have undergone training in Chinese cooking to serve tourists on visits to Cambridge, a hugely popular destinatio­n for Chinese visitors to the UK.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Michelin-starred chef Bill Brogan with his caterer’s guide to Chinese cuisine.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Michelin-starred chef Bill Brogan with his caterer’s guide to Chinese cuisine.

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