The Northern Advocate

Culinary scene loses colourful, creative chef

- RNZ

Those involved in the country’s culinary scene are rememberin­g chef Michael Lee Richards, who died on Wednesday night aged 66.

Originally a lawyer, Richards’s successful cooking career began in tautahi in the 1980s, when he bought central city restaurant Casa Del Sol and began White Tie catering.

By the 1990s, it was called Michael’s Restaurant and a cooking school was added upstairs.

He went on to create a festival, write a cookbook and teach all over the world.

Tina Duncan, who bought Richards’s White Tie catering business from him in 1999, was an old colleague of his.

“As a restaurate­ur and a foodie, I think he was certainly ahead of his time. He was the most creative person as well as being so much fun and infuriatin­g as well, I have to say,” she said.

“He just had a real flair for cooking.” She began working for Richards in 1994, starting as his personal assistant.

“We travelled the world. We went on world cruises because he taught cooking on cruise ships.

‘‘We went to Singapore because he was doing the menus for Air New Zealand.

‘‘We [were over there] to see the food go onto the internatio­nal Air New Zealand planes.”

Between 1999 and 2001, Duncan and Richards began Savour New Zealand.

The biennial food event ran until 2009 and was a mainstay on the calendar of the culinary community, said Lauraine Jacobs, a longtime food writer.

“He wasn’t really fearful of anything and he would invite fantastic overseas guests to come and talk. Because of him, I think, we became aware of a greater world out there in food.’’

She and Richards were close friends for many years. He had a big heart, in the way he opened up his home to others.

“[British food writer] Diana Kennedy MBE came to New Zealand . . . So I rang Michael — he lived over in Governors Bay in the most wonderful house where he did wonderful entertaini­ng — I asked and he was like ‘of course, of course Diana Kennedy can stay’,” she said.

“Diana had only been staying there for two days when she rang me and said ‘Lauraine I’m going to be very naughty.

‘‘I love Michael and his partner so much that I’m not going to Queenstown!’ And she stayed for the rest of the week.

“He was just so generous and so wonderful that he could just embrace somebody from another country who was in her late 80s. He looked after everyone.”

Jacobs did not hesitate in naming his signature dish, either.

“It’s a cold dish but it was a smoked, glazed salmon and everyone would want that on their catering menus.”

Richards died in Christchur­ch with his partner and sister by his side after a decade-long period of ill-health.

 ?? ?? Michael Lee Richards
Michael Lee Richards

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