Ben Shewry
Ben Shewry | |
---|---|
Born | 1977 |
Spouse | Kylie Shewry |
Children | 3 |
Culinary career | |
Cooking style | Australian, Contemporary |
Rating(s) | |
Current restaurant(s) | |
Television show(s) | |
Award(s) won
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Website | www |
Ben Shewry (born 1977) is a New Zealand Chef and restaurateur of Attica restaurant in Melbourne, a certified B Corporation and author of two books, Origin (Murdoch Books, out of print) and Uses for Obsession (Murdoch Books, 2024)
Early life
[edit]Shewry is a Melbourne, Australia-based chef who grew up on a farm in the North Island of New Zealand in the North Taranaki towns of Awakino and Whareorino. His food is influenced by his childhood upbringing in the natural surroundings and coastline of North Taranaki. He had his first job in a local restaurant when he was 10, he worked in a bakery when he was 13, and he had his first kitchen job when he was 14.[1]
Career
[edit]Shewry was one of six chefs featured in the inaugural season of the Netflix original documentary Chef's Table. In the documentary his life, struggles, and inspiration for cooking are detailed. His cooking philosophy is deeply rooted in using indigenous ingredients, in both the Australian and New Zealand contexts. Shewry has expressed enthusiasm about his own inspiration by the indigenous Maori hangi (or earth oven feast ceremony), and other indigenous ingredients such as kūmara (sweet potato) and native mutton bird.
The use of ingredients native to Australia in a top restaurant was an idea that was not widely accepted initially, making it difficult for his restaurant to garner a following. Eventually, his unorthodox style of cooking was recognized by locals and critics, and today Attica has received several prestigious awards[2] including a decade on the World's 50 Best and attracts top chefs from around the world.[3] Shewry also features in the Netflix series Restaurant Australia.
Ben was employed as the Head Chef of Attica Restaurant in 2005; before purchasing the restaurant from his employer in 2015.
In 2019, his restaurant Attica was named Australia's best restaurant at the Gourmet Traveller food awards.[4][5]
Ben's most recent work is the publication of his book; Uses for Obsession, A Chef's Memoir. In this absorbing and wide-ranging memori meets manifesto, Shewry applies his sometimes searing, sometimes comic eye to creative freedom in the kitchen, food journalism, sexism in hospitality, the fraud of the farm-to-table sustainability ethos, the cult of the chef, cooking as muse and the legendary Family Bolognese.
He shares how a childhood surrounded by nature and a reverence for First People's cultures has influenced his work, the values he lives by and the meticulous, inventive multi-course menu that is synonymous with Attica (release date 1 October 2024, Murdoch Books)
"[6]Deeply thoughtful, unflinchingly honest and heartwarmingly original. Ben's unique creativity is clearly not limited to Attica" - Hamish Blake
"Powerful, vulnerable, intense, full of love and some darkness too" - Matty Matheson, chef, author, producer and actor
Ben Shewry passionately believes in sustainability and has been an Ambassador for the [1] Good Fish Project since December 2018. " In my position as a chef, I have a big influence on what people eat and what other people cook because our restaurant is well known. If I don't have what I would call a clean menu - if I don't have best practise, the most sustainable menu I can have in terms of shellfish and seafood - then I am contributing to the problem" - Ben Shewry, Good Fish Project.
Attica Restaurant is also B Corporation (certification); Service with Significant Environmental Footprint since February 2024, further cementing Shewry's beliefs in best practises for his business.
References
[edit]- ^ Jill, Dupleix (24 June 2016). "OTHER PASSIONS: BEN SHEWRY". The Australian Financial Review. p. 58. ProQuest 1798999623.
- ^ "Awards". Attica Restaurant. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
- ^ Holroyd, Jane (19 August 2014). "Attica's Ben Shewry lures top chefs to Melbourne for his WAW food festival". GoodFood.com.au. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
- ^ "'We see a lot of tokenism': Attica's Ben Shewry urges chefs to embrace Indigenous Australia". the Guardian. 21 August 2019. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
- ^ "A Perth Bar Takes Home a Top Prize at This Year's Gourmet Traveller Restaurant Awards". Broadsheet. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
- ^ Uses for Obsession. Australia: Murdoch Books (published 1 October 2024). 20 September 2024. pp. https://www.murdochbooks.com/browse/book/Ben-Shewry-Uses-for-Obsession-9781922616845. ISBN 9781922616845.
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External links
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