The Irish Mail on Sunday

Her royal Heinzness!

Camilla reveals she prefers beans on toast, frozen chicken pies and fish and chips to posh nosh in the world’s best restaurant­s

- By Jane Wharton

THE Duchess of Cornwall could secure the top table at any of the world’s finest restaurant­s but she has revealed her fondness for the simpler fare of fish and chips, beans on toast – and a childhood obsession with ready-meal frozen pies.

She admits her kitchen skills are limited and reveals she has a friendly competitio­n with her husband, Prince Charles, over the fruit and vegetables that they grow.

Describing her culinary style as ‘nothing too mucked about, or fussy or fiddly’, Camilla says she learned to cook by watching her mother, Rosalind Shand, who made food the ‘heart’ of family life.

‘One of my earliest memories is podding those peas and beans with my mother, an accomplish­ed cook,’ she says. ‘I learned from my mother. I’ve never followed a recipe in my life. On Friday nights, we were allowed to choose our dinner,’ she recalls. ‘I always went for frozen chicken pie, much to my mother’s despair.’

In the Swinging Sixties, Camilla often visited London’s best restaurant­s, such as Alexander’s on the King’s Road. ‘I remember how excited I was when I first ate prawn and avocado at Alexander’s... The combinatio­n seemed impossibly exotic,’ she says.

The Shand family spent summers on the island of Ischia, near Naples, which Camilla says ‘instilled a lifelong passion for Italian food’. Yet she takes little credit for the refined palate of her restaurant critic son, Tom Parker-Bowles, describing herself as ‘never the most adventurou­s of cooks’.

Camilla specialise­d in simple, healthy food when Tom and his sister Laura were growing up.

‘My cooking is about good ingredient­s. Nothing too mucked about, or fussy or fiddly. Lots of tarragon chicken, scrambled eggs and bacon, and chicken casserole. There were always roasts on Sunday.

‘The children ate a lot of cheese on toast. We had a kitchen garden... so we ate seasonally before it became en vogue. That’s just what you did in the country back then.’

She recently teamed up with Mary Berry to judge the winning recipe for a pudding to mark Queen Elizabeth’s Platinum Jubilee, but says she could ‘fill a book with all my cooking disasters. I’m not a natural baker, to say the least.

‘As for baked potatoes... many a poor, incinerate­d specimen has been found in the bottom of the Aga, put in, then forgotten about.’

Camilla, who will feature on the cover of Vogue magazine to mark her 75th birthday in July, says: ‘I do still cook for myself when at home. Simple things like fish en papillote with butter and herbs. And vegetables from the garden.

‘I love the vegetable garden. I’m very proud of my white peaches. My husband is an excellent gardener, and we’re quite competitiv­e about our fruit and vegetables.’

However, she admits: ‘One of my favourite foods is baked beans on toast. Always Heinz.

‘And freshly cooked fish and chips, wrapped in paper.

‘That smell. You cannot beat proper fish and chips.’

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 ?? ?? HOLD THE CAVIAR: Camilla with fish and chips and, left, inspecting veg with Charles. Below: Her favourite beans
HOLD THE CAVIAR: Camilla with fish and chips and, left, inspecting veg with Charles. Below: Her favourite beans

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