Hartford Courant

Fast food at its finest

Chef Gordon Ramsay’s social media project culminates in a new cookbook of speedy dishes

- By Leanne Italie

How did Gordon Ramsay spend his pandemic lockdown? Getting frenetic in a kitchen, of course.

The chef with a dizzying number of books, restaurant­s and TV shows was home in Cornwall, England, with mouths to feed last year when he did a series of lives on Instagram cooking meals in 10 minutes or less. The fast-moving endeavor he began on Youtube the year before culminated in “Ramsay in 10,” his new cookbook filled with recipes made against the clock.

“There’s so much fun to be had in cooking food that doesn’t need to take 60 or 70 minutes at a time,” he said in a recent Zoom interview. “‘Ramsay in 10’ was a bit of a miracle because it’s the first time in 20 years anyone’s ever said to me, ‘Stop. Time out.’ ”

The world is used to seeing a sped-up — and sometimes terrifying — Ramsay, saving failing restaurant­s, judging chefs competing for prize money, scaling Sicilian cliffs in search of the perfect octopus. But it’s not used to seeing him run around his own kitchen surrounded by his wife, Tana, and their kids, ranging from 2 to 23.

The Instagram lives tickled thousands of fans with the rare treat of seeing Ramsay cook in real time.

“No passports. No flights. No schedule,” he said of the shutdown. “You’re not filming. You’re staying home and you’re cooking breakfast, lunch and dinner. If you told me that two years ago, I’d never have believed you. We had to get super-creative and go quick and easy and uncomplica­ted.”

He had the pandemic’s strains on families top of mind.

“Every doctor and nurse was on their knees, and every hospital was bursting with anxiety and pressure,”

Ramsay said. “And so what I wanted to do was to take that pressure off.”

Among his 100 recipes made in a flash: a humble omelet elevated with mozzarella and shiitake mushrooms, and another with fish sauce and shrimp.

There’s a one-pan pumpkin pasta with amaretti biscuits and lemon thyme, and a quick smoked haddock kedgeree using precooked rice.

Ramsay filled his book — his 31st — with shortcuts and tips on how to stock a

pantry and fridge for home cooks on the go. He calls these recipes fast food at its finest — not quicker than a frozen meal tossed into a microwave but faster than a takeout delivery. And he gives home cooks grace on the clock, acknowledg­ing his status as a seasoned pro.

“The way I used to write cookbooks was thinking I’m going to be judged by every chef on the planet. The recipes were laden with

152 ingredient­s. Cooking at home is completely different, and I’ve learned that so much more,” Ramsay said.

At home, it’s usually Tana who does the cooking.

“She is an amazing home cook,” he said. “That’s the first time I’ve properly cooked at home. It’s like running a restaurant where no one went home.”

The 54-year-old Ramsay

seems ever-present on streaming and TV networks in the U.K. and U.S. With his own production company, the shows keep coming. There’s “Hell’s Kitchen,” “Masterchef ” and “Masterchef Jr.,” “Kitchen Nightmares” and “The F Word,” to name a few. His latest, “Next Level Chef,” is set to premiere on Fox in January with line cooks, home chefs, social media stars and food truck owners competing to be crowned culinary king or queen.

Among his reasons for taking to television as long ago as 1997 was to promote his restaurant­s. With seven Michelin stars, Ramsay now has 50 restaurant­s scattered around the world. And he’s thankful all survived the pandemic. His latest is due to open at the end of the year in Edinburgh.

Another thing that keeps him on screens, he said, is his lust for discoverin­g new talent. The money ain’t bad, either. His net worth has been estimated at roughly $220 million.

Ramsay started out modestly after moving from Scotland to Stratford-upon-avon as a boy. He washed dishes in restaurant­s and watched his mom toil as a restaurant cook, with a second job as a nurse. He likens the restaurant world to high-pressure competitiv­e sport, which he caught a taste of as a teenage footballer in England before injuries took him off the pitch for good.

“So at the age of 18, when you’re down on your knees, mum always taught me from a very early age, never get bitter, just get even.

Dust yourself off and pull yourself together,” he said. “So the escape in food was meant to plop myself in an area where nobody knew who I was.”

He went to France for three years to study the cuisine there, and a career was born.

To relax, Ramsay works out. He swims, jogs, rides bikes and hikes with 2-yearold Oscar on his back. Being fit serves him well in his fast-paced life on TV and at the top of a restaurant empire, he said.

“My mum was the early influencer in terms of food. We got taught not just to respect food, but not waste it. She always said eat with your belly, not your eyes.”

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 ?? JUSTIN MANDEL/AP ?? Chef, TV personalit­y and author Gordon Ramsay prepares tuna katsu in London in March. His new cookbook,“ramsay in 10,” was inspired by a series of social media videos he did making recipes in 10 minutes or less.
JUSTIN MANDEL/AP Chef, TV personalit­y and author Gordon Ramsay prepares tuna katsu in London in March. His new cookbook,“ramsay in 10,” was inspired by a series of social media videos he did making recipes in 10 minutes or less.
 ?? JAMIE ORLANDO SMITH/HACHETTE BOOK GROUP ?? Mozzarella and basil omelette with asparagus and shiitake mushrooms is one of the recipes featured in Ramsay’s new cookbook.
JAMIE ORLANDO SMITH/HACHETTE BOOK GROUP Mozzarella and basil omelette with asparagus and shiitake mushrooms is one of the recipes featured in Ramsay’s new cookbook.

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