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Contents News & Opinion


6 Roux Scholarship 2015 names its six finalists 8 News in brief The week’s top stories 14 Week in hospitality 16 Review of reviews What the papers say


22 Viewpoint Arnold Fewell argues that money should not be a barrier to accessibility


6 The Caterer interview Zuleika Fennell As chief operating officer of arguably the most


revered restaurant group in the UK, Zuleika Fennell has the enviable task of executing the strategy of her visionary bosses, Jeremy King and Christopher Corbin. In her first major interview, she tells Amanda Afiya why empowering women is part of the plan


You have an unusual name, where does it originate from? My mother was a dancer, trained in ballet, and my father [David Fennell] was an actor in Crossroads, for his sins, and they met in the West End. My name came from a play my father was doing at the time, based on the book Zuleika Dobson by Max Beerbohm.


Where did you grow up? Mostly in Buckinghamshire. My father – as many actors and actresses end up doing – went into hospitality. He opened a series of pubs and country inns with great restaurants attached to them, and so from 14 onwards I was working in one business or another, washing dishes, serving desserts, working on reception and the bar and working my way up to being a waiter. That’s where my passion for hospitality came from, to be honest.


You studied politics at university. Were you thinking of a different career? All I had ever wanted to do was go into the theatre. I trained as a singer in school and university, and was actually at school with one of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s sons. In fact, he came to a school production and saw me there and wanted to pull me out of school to go into musical theatre. Both of my parents said that over their dead bodies was I going to drop out of education and go into musical theatre. They kept saying to me, just do your GCSEs, and I did those, and then they said, “Well, just do your A levels. You’re a singer, so you can come back to it at any time”, so I did my A levels, and then they said “Well, you’ve done so well now, why don’t you do a degree?” When I finished university, I thought I’d


kind of missed the boat on the singing thing, although looking back I don’t think that was


necessarily the case. But by that stage I had become so turned on academically that I just wanted to get into the working world and make my way. Plus, the competition in the stage and theatre and music worlds is so fierce and I think when you are a young girl, suffer- ing from confidence problems, the entertain- ment industry probably isn’t the right one to go into. With hindsight, my parents were probably steering me in the right direction.


Why do you think you had confidence problems? As a younger woman, I think I was a really anxious person. As a child, I was never good with change and it made me very unsettled. My parents moved around a lot – they bought new businesses, turned them around and sold them, so we were uprooted regularly. I also grew up with three incredibly confident sib- lings who were always fighting for attention.


After your degree you went to Australia. I considered Westminster and the world of politics and, oddly enough, when I look at the future, maybe 10 years from now, it might be a nice second career, but at the time it seemed like such a back-stabbing environ- ment; a really harsh, male one. So I decided to take a year off and go to Australia to do a bit of travelling and see what I wanted to do when I came back. But of course, with my hospitality background, I ended up moving around hotels in Australia for five years.


So why did you leave Australia and, more specifically, hotel operations? The only reason I got out of the industry on the ops side was because I was unlucky enough to be a passenger in a very bad car crash. I was an inch-and-a-half taller than I am


“Somebody needs to go around behind entrepreneurs, putting all the structure and the processes in place to make sure their vision is being executed correctly”


1994-1997 BA Hons in politics, Durham University (2:1)


1997-2002 Various roles in guest relations, food and beverage and general management with Hilton and Hyatt Hotels around Australia


2002-2004 Admin temp roles in the City of London.


2004-2005 Personnel administrator, Corbin & King


2005-2007 Head of personnel and development, Corbin & King


2007-2012 Director of human resources, Corbin & King


2012-to date Chief operating officer, Corbin & King


24 | The Caterer | 20 March 2015 www.thecaterer.com www.thecaterer.com 20 March 2015 | The Caterer | 25


24 60


Products


54 Product news What’s happening in the world of suppliers 56 Inside IFE All the highlights from the show


60 The art of craft The rise of the small craft brewer shows no signs of falling flat


People


64 Minute on the clock Eddie Holmes of healthy high-street lunchtime café Chop’d


42


66 Loving life in hospitality Louisa-May Matthews, junior sous chef for Sodexo


Phone numbers: 020 7881 + • Publisher Mark Lewis + 4801 • Editor Amanda Afiya + 4803 • Content team Content editor James Stagg + 4811 james.stagg@thecaterer.com • Hotels editor Janet Harmer + 4814 janet.harmer@thecaterer.com • Restaurants editor Neil Gerrard + 4807 neil.gerrard@thecaterer.com • Foodservice editor Janie Manzoori-Stamford + 4812 janie.stamford@thecaterer.com • Products and suppliers editor Lisa Jenkins + 4816 lisa.jenkins@thecaterer.com • Reporter Hannah Thompson + 4808 hannah.thompson@thecaterer.com • If you have a news story, contact: news@thecaterer.com • Production Production and art editor Chris Russell • Chief sub-editor Louise Clissold • Senior sub-editor Kirsty Utting • Multimedia production executive Craig Jones • www.thecaterer.com • Digital production editor Katherine Alano + 4804 • The Caterer events Group events manager Shiva Hobson + 4826 • Other contacts Head of marketing Jeremy Gibson + 4829 • Marketing executive Breiman Munoz-Mena + 4876 • Projects manager/PA to the publisher Lisa Goold + 4802 • To place a display advert, contact: + 4819 or email advertising@thecaterer.com • Group sales manager Rob Adam • Sales manager Jan De Iulio • Account managers Michael Murray • Sales support co-ordinator Vicky Knight • To place a job advert, contact: Recruitment sales manager Tanya Matthews + 4830 • Recruitment account manager Jade Ritchie + 4822 • Recruitment sales executive Dominique Blenman + 4390 or email jobs@thecaterer.com • To place a property, classified or The Caterer Directory advert, contact: Sales executive Ed McCauley+ 4832 or email classified@thecaterer.com or property@thecaterer.com or directory@thecaterer.com • Chief executive officer Duncan Horton • Chairman Clive Jacobs


www.thecaterer.com 20 March 2015 | The Caterer | 3 30 More online www.thecaterer.com Business


24 The Caterer interview Zuleika Fennell, chief operating officer at Corbin & King


30 Where there’s a Will... Xavier Rousset talks to Hawksmoor co-founder Will Beckett


34 NRB top 50 unveiled The top operators, as judged by the Northern Restaurant and Bar show


Chef


42 Tickled pink The Devonshire Arms’ head chef Adam Smith creates a rhapsody in rhubarb 50 Menuwatch Chamberlain’s, London


52 Recipe of the week Thai chicken noodle soup from Rosa’s Thai Café Cookbook





PHOTOGRAPHY BY ADRAIN FRANKLIN/HOSPITALITY MEDIA


Zuleika Fennell’s CV


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