Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Thinking Differently Hero: Heston Blumenthal

Heston Blumenthal. Even his name inspires thoughts of culinary artistry – and in the hospitality word, he is the embodiment of Thinking Differently.

His restaurant, The Fat Duck, in Bray, Berkshire has three Michelin stars and has been voted the best restaurant in the UK for the last four years. Whilst these are amazing achievements by themselves it becomes even more so when you realise that Chef Blumenthal is self-taught.

At the age of 16, Heston experienced his first taste of Michelin starred dining and from that moment, longed to be a chef. He spent his evenings cooking classical French dishes in order to harness the best from his food. He worked as a photocopier salesman and debt collector in order to finance trips to France visiting restaurants and wine estates where he would absorb as much as possible about flavours and gastronomy. His creativity and passion meant that aside from a week's work experience in Raymond Blanc's kitchen and a short time in Marco Pierre White's, Heston taught himself the tools of his trade.

Experimenting with the science of the kitchen, Heston followed his natural curiosity testing established culinary rules, seeing which could be bent, and which others could be broken. Finally in 1995 Heston gathered together his savings and purchased a dark and pokey building in the tiny village of Bray. With an outside toilet, a tiny kitchen and a terrible reputation, it was not the ideal location for a restaurant, but it was here that Heston opened his first restaurant.

On the second day the oven exploded, and it soon became clear that the gas pipes weren’t big enough to boil the culinary vats of water… but the restaurant started getting great reviews. It was then that Heston started applying scientific techniques to the wider restaurant experience incorporating flavours and sensations approaching cuisine as a scientist. The result of his ongoing experimentation and creativity was that in 2005 the pokey little ‘bistro’ was declared the Best Restaurant in the World by Restaurant magazine.

Heston Blumenthal, with his signature dishes of snail porridge, bacon ice cream and parsnip cereal, is truly a culinary pioneer. He has a collection of Michelin starred restaurants that push boundaries, a BAFTA nominated television programme under his belt, a string of popular cookery books and a loyal following of fans. Not bad for a Chef with no training…

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Tesco Sampling: 10th and 12th February


We had some fantastic feedback from the Modern Milk that was sampled up and down the country last week, and we're pleased to announce another 50 stores are taking part in sampling on the 10th and 12th February.

So if you're out and about, and in your local Tesco store keep your eyes peeled for the team of instore taster who will be on hand to help you taste Banana and Honey and Coffee and Vanilla flavours.

(And don't forget you can still all four of the Modern Milk flavours at McColls for £1 until the 14th February!)

Thursday 10th February 2011

Bristol Goldenhill

Broadstairs Extra

Cambridge Newmarket Road

Chorley Extra

Crawley Hazelwick

Edgbaston

Fulbourn Cherry Hinton

Gallions Reach

Gillingham Kent

Gloucester

Halifax Aachen Way

Hemel Hempstead

Irlam Extra

Kidderminster

Lowestoft Pleasurewood

Newport Gwent Extra

North Shields Extra

Nottingham Carlton

Osterley

Peterborough Extra

Ponders End Extra

Pontypridd

Reading Extra

Sheffield Abbeydale

Stroud


Saturday 12th February 2011

Amersham

Ashford Crooksfoot Extra

Ashford Middlesex

Basingstoke

Bedford Cardington Road

Bishops Stortford

Borehamwood Extra

Bristol East Extra

Cambridge Bar Hill Extra

Cheshunt Extra

Culverhouse Cross Extra

Folkestone

Hastings Extra

Lewisham

Milton

Pitsea Extra

Purley Extra

Romford Extra

Sidcup

Southend Extra

Stevenage Extra

Surrey Quays

Warrington Extra

Wembley Extra

Weston Favell Extra

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Thinking Differently Hero: Leonardo Da Vinci

We couldn’t write a series about our ‘Thinking Differently Heroes’ and not include one of history’s most famous and influential thinkers: Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci.


Widely considered to be one of the greatest painters of all time, Da Vinci’s talents far extended the reach of his paintbrush - even if that paintbrush did craft the Mona Lisa.


The illegitimate son of a wealthy nobleman, and with no formal education, Da Vinci became perhaps the most diversely talented person ever to have lived.

Although he is known primarily as a painter Da Vinci in fact left less than 30 completed works, and during his life was known primarily as an engineer and inventor. He conceptualised the helicopter, the tank, and the calculator hundreds of years before they were officially ‘invented.’ He outlined a rudimentary theory of plate tectonics, invented musical instruments, hydraulic pumps, reversible crank mechanisms, and even a steam cannon.


Even with his life choices Da Vinci thought differently – he was a vegetarian, very unusual for the renaissance era when banquets were very popular. But even his vegetarianism didn’t stop him from dissecting bodies to study anatomy and to map out where the human soul was located. Nor did it stop him from accepting a job as a military engineer, improving and inventing a variety of siege weaponry.


Even his art didn’t escape his experimentation. Rather than sticking with established techniques Da Vinci played around with the mix of his paints and canvas. He was one of the first artists in Italy to use oil paints instead of egg tempera, enjoying the freedom it gave him to rework a painting even creating his own recipe for oil paints.


In almost every area of his life he thought differently, assessing problems from different angles and looking for new solutions. Leonardo da Vinci is one of the greatest minds ever to have lived – and so sir, we at Modern Milk salute you!