Foods that 19 top chefs just refuse to eat
The dishes chefs would rather avoid
Gordon Ramsay #1 – airplane food
Gordon Ramsay #2 – soup of the day
The Kitchen Nightmares star also advises against ordering soup of the day. When asked what customers should never order in a restaurant, he told Town and Country, “Ask what yesterday’s soup du jour was before today’s special. It may be the case that it’s the soup du month.”
Wolfgang Puck – Japanese Wagu steak
Antonio Carluccio – spaghetti bolognese
Nigella Lawson #1 – foie gras
Nigella Lawson #2 – clean eating
Domestic Goodness Nigella Lawson also been outspoken against the recent trend for clean eating and refuses to follow the strict diet. “I wouldn’t want a life where I lived on chia seed pudding,” she told UK’s Good Housekeeping. “Life is about balance, it's not about being smug. You don't eat things because you think they're good for you.”
Anthony Bourdain #1 – fish on Mondays
In his book, Kitchen Confidential: Adventures In The Culinary Underbelly, the late, great chef Anthony Bourdain wrote, “I never order fish on Monday, unless I'm eating at a four-star restaurant where I know they are buying their fish directly from the source. I know how old most seafood is on Monday – about four to five days old!”
Anthony Bourdain #2 – hollandaise
Many chefs warn against eggs hollandaise and Anthony Bourdain is one of them. “How about hollandaise sauce?” he told the Guardian. ”Not for me. Bacteria love hollandaise. And nobody I know has ever made hollandaise to order.”
Ryan Ososky – chicken
Michael Smith – low-fat processed foods
Angela Hartnett – cilantro/coriander
Some chefs go over-the-top with their garnishes. Angela Harnett is not one of them. Executive chef of Murano in London’s Mayfair, can’t stand cilantro. “I find it too pungent and overpowering,” she tells the Independent. “You see a lot of this senseless garnish… An experienced chef will appreciate that there shouldn't be anything superfluous on a plate. If it doesn't add flavor there isn't much point."
David Chang – whale meat
Dan Schroeder – well done steak
Ina Garten – a varied breakfast
Marco Pierre White – Michelin-starred restaurant
Surprisingly for the first chef in Britain to have received three Michelin stars, Marco Pierre White is not a fan of eateries that have received the same accolade. “I don’t like Michelin-starred restaurants. I find a lot of the modern Michelin-starred restaurants are trying too hard," he told the Sunday Mercury. “Michelin-star restaurants are not what people want – little knick-knacks of food served 12 times.”
Mark Nichols – oysters
A risky choice, oysters can make you serious ill if they aren’t sourced, stored and prepared properly. Cordon Bleu-trained chef Mark Nichols refuses to eat them if they were harvested more than 100 miles away from the restaurant serving them. "If handled and stored incorrectly, raw oysters can kill you,” he told Readers Digest.
Jean-Christophe Novelli – onions
“I do not like ze onions or ze peas,” famed French chef Jean-Christophe Novelli once told the Independent. Although, he’s admitted to forcing himself for one special lady. Talking about his favorite London restaurant, La Rocchetta, back in 2005, he told the Telegraph: “It's an Italian family business; the mother is 69 and what she cooks is unbelievable. She makes a tomato sauce that has onions in it and as I hate onions it is a real compliment for me to eat it.”
Michael Armstrong – a meal that’s not a specialty
Todd Mitgang – anything ‘off menu’
Andrew Zimmern – walnuts
American chef and TV personality Zimmern has traveled the globe eating unusual things on his series Bizarre Foods, including tarantulas, grilled cow udders and pig brains. But the one food he can’t stand? Walnuts. He insists they taste too soapy.
Mary Berry #1 – takeout
Mary Berry #2 - a restaurant Christmas dinner
Popular chef and author Mary Berry is famed for her home-cooked family meals, so it’s hardly surprising she refuses to eat Christmas dinner in a restaurant. "I totally understand other people who eat out, but I have no wish to," she told MailOnline.
Nigel Slater – bland health foods
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