Gordon James Ramsay,
OBE, (born 8 November 1966) is a
chef,
television personality and
restaurateur. He has been awarded a total of 16
Michelin
Stars, and in 2001 became one of only three chefs in the United
Kingdom to hold three Michelin stars at one time. Ramsay currently
ranks 3rd in the world in terms of Michelin Stars behind
Joël Robuchon and
Alain Ducasse.
Ramsay is known for presenting TV programmes about competitive
cookery and food, such as
Hell's
Kitchen,
The F Word and
Ramsay's Kitchen
Nightmares.
Early life
Ramsay's father was, at various times, a swimming pool manager,
welder, shopkeeper, and his mother and
sister were nurses. Ramsay has described his early life as
"hopelessly itinerant", as his family moved constantly due to the
aspirations and failures of his father.
In 1976, they finally
settled in Stratford-upon-Avon
where he grew up with an allotment nearby. In past
public interviews, Ramsay has declined to describe his father as an
alcoholic; however, his autobiography,
Humble Pie,
describes his early life as being marked by abuse and neglect from
this "hard-drinking womanizer".
At the age of 16, Ramsay moved out of the
family house into a flat in Banbury
.
Football career
Ramsay
played football, was first chosen
to play under-14 football at age 12, and was chosen to play for
Warwickshire
at age 12. His football career was marked by
a number of injuries, causing him to remark later in life, "Perhaps
I was doomed when it came to football". In mid-1984, Ramsay had a
trial with
Rangers, the club he
supported as a boy. He seriously injured his knee, smashing the
cartilage during training. Ramsay continued to train and play on
the injured knee, tearing a cruciate ligament during a squash game.
He never fully recovered from the double injury. Rangers told him
that he may be signed, however his personal coach Harold was not
appreciated by the club hierarchy and suggested that he could sign
with a club in a lower division.
Ramsay claimed to have played two first-team games for Rangers, and
to have been signed by the club at the age of 15. He also claims he
was scouted by Rangers when playing for
Oxford United in the
FA Youth Cup. Ramsay's claims have been
questioned, as there is no record of Ramsay playing for Oxford
United and the fixture in question may not have even taken place.
Similarly, Ramsay's name has never appeared on a Rangers' team
sheet, and the manager who Ramsay blames for ending his career was
at a completely different club at the time. A spokesperson for
Ramsay suggested that any inaccuracies about his recollection of
his footballing career were due to the passage of time.
Early cooking career
By this time, Ramsay's interest in cooking had already begun, and
rather than be known as "the football player with the gammy knee",
at age 19, Ramsay paid more serious attention to his culinary
education.
After weighing his options, without enough
O levels to join either the Royal Navy or the police
force, Ramsay enrolled at a local college, sponsored by the
Rotarians
to study Hotel Management. He describes his
decision to enter catering college as "an accident, a complete
accident".
In the late 1980s, he worked as a
commis
chef at the
Wroxton House Hotel, then ran the kitchen
and 60-seat dining room at the
Wickham Arms, until his
relationship with the owner's wife made the situation difficult.
Ramsay
then moved to London
, where he
worked in a series of restaurants until being inspired to work for
the temperamental Marco Pierre
White at Harveys.
After working at
Harveys for two years and ten months,
Ramsay, tired of "the rages and the bullying and violence", decided
that the way to further advance his career was to study
French cuisine.
White discouraged
Ramsay from taking a job in Paris
, instead
encouraging him to work for Albert Roux
at Le
Gavroche
in Mayfair
.
(While at Le Gavroche, he met Jean-Claude Breton, now his
maître d' at
Royal Hospital Road.)
After working at Le Gavroche for a year, Albert Roux invited Ramsay
to work with him at
Hotel Diva, a ski resort in the
French Alps, as his number two. From
there, Ramsay moved to Paris to work with
Guy
Savoy and
Joël Robuchon, both
Michelin-starred chefs.
He continued his
training in France
for three
years, before giving in to the physical and mental stress of the
kitchens and taking a year to work as a personal chef on the
private yacht Idlewild, based in Bermuda
.
Head chef
Upon his
return to London in 1993, Ramsay was offered the position of head
chef at La Tante Claire in Chelsea
.
Shortly thereafter, Marco White re-entered his life, offering to
set him up with a head chef position and 10% share in the
Rossmore, owned by White's business partners. The
restaurant was renamed
Aubergine and went on to win its
first
Michelin star fourteen months
later. In 1997,
Aubergine won its second Michelin star.
Despite the restaurant's success, a dispute with Ramsay's business
owners and Ramsay's dream of running his own restaurant led to his
leaving the partnership in 1997.In 1998, Ramsay opened his own
restaurant in Chelsea,
Gordon Ramsay at Royal Hospital
Road, with the help of his father-in-law, Chris Hutcheson. The
restaurant gained its third Michelin star in 2001, making Ramsay
the first Scot to achieve that feat.
From his
first restaurant, Ramsay's empire has expanded rapidly, first
opening Petrus, where six bankers famously spent over
£44,000 on wine during a single meal in 2001, then Amaryllis
in Glasgow (which he was later forced to
close) and later Gordon Ramsay at Claridge's
. Restaurants at the Dubai Creek
and Connaught Hotels
followed, the latter branded with his protégée,
Angela Hartnett's, name.
Ramsay
has now begun opening restaurants outside the UK, beginning with
Verre in Dubai
.
Gordon Ramsay at Conrad Tokyo and
Cerise by Gordon Ramsay both opened in Tokyo in 2005, and
in November, 2006, Gordon Ramsay at the London opened in
New York
City
, winning top newcomer in the city’s coveted
Zagat guide, despite mixed reviews from
professional critics.
In 2007,
Ramsay opened his first Irish restaurant; Gordon Ramsay at
Powerscourt opened at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Powerscourt,
Co.
Wicklow
, Ireland
.
In May 2008 Ramsay opened his first west coast restaurant, in Los
Angeles, California. Situated in the former Bel-Age hotel on the
Sunset Strip in West Hollywood, the
hotel has recently been renovated and re-named the London West
Hollywood. As with his New York City establishment, the restaurant
will be called
Gordon Ramsay at the London West Hollywood.
Many episodes of Ramsay's US series
Hell's Kitchen are recorded in
southern California, which has generated a great deal of notoriety
for Gordon Ramsay.
Awards
Ramsay is
one of only three chefs in the UK to maintain three Michelin
Stars for his restaurant (the others being Heston Blumenthal and Alain Roux
). He was appointed
OBE in
the 2006 honours list "for services to the hospitality
industry".
In July 2006, Ramsay won the Catey award for "Independent
Restaurateur of the Year", becoming only the third person to have
won three
Catey awards, the biggest
awards of the UK hospitality industry. Ramsay's two previous
Catey awards were in 1995 (Newcomer
of the Year) and 2000 (Chef of the Year). The other two
triple-winners are
Michel Roux and
Andrew and Jacquie Pern.
In September 2006, he was named as the most influential person in
the UK hospitality industry in the annual
Caterersearch 100 list, published by
Caterer and
Hotelkeeper magazine. He overtook
Jamie Oliver, who had been top of the list in
2005.
Also in
2006, Ramsay was nominated as a candidate for Rector at the University of St Andrews
, but was beaten at the polls by Simon Pepper. Despite a publicity
campaign, Ramsay never visited St Andrews and did not appear in
press interviews.
Ramsay's flagship restaurant, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, was voted
London's top restaurant in food bible
Harden's for eight years, but in 2008 was
placed below Petrus, a restaurant run by former protégé Marcus
Wareing.
Gordon Ramsay Holdings
All of Ramsay's business interests (restaurants, media,
consultancy) are held in the company Gordon Ramsay Holdings
Limited. Run in partnership with his father-in-law Chris Hutcheson,
Ramsay owns a 69% stake valued at £67m.
Whereas previous ventures acted as a combined consultant/brand, in
November 2006 Ramsay announced plans to create three restaurants in
the United States in partnership with private equity group
Blackstone Group, who are refurbishing each
of the chosen hotels into five star locations at a cost of £100M
per hotel. At an investment of £3m per restaurant for the 10-year
lease, all the restaurants will offer the chef’s trademark modern
European cuisine, and opened in 2006/2007 at:
In late
2006 Gordon Ramsay Holdings purchased three London pubs; The
Narrow in Limehouse
, which opened in March 2007, the
Devonshire in Chiswick, which opened in October of that
year and The Warrington in Maida Vale
, which opened in February 2008.
Ramsay acts as a consultant to numerous catering organizations, and
was recruited by
Singapore
Airlines as one of its "International Culinary Panel"
consultants.
In May 2008 it was confirmed that Ramsay's protégé of 15 years,
Marcus Wareing was going solo having
opened and operated Pétrus at The Berkeley Hotel on behalf of
Gordon Ramsay Holdings since 2003.
With the name Pétrus owned by Gordon
Ramsay Holdings, industry sources suggested it was likely to
transfer to another restaurant in the group with the former
La
Noisette
site
identified as the most likely.
As of June 2009, Gordon Ramsay Holdings is reported to be in severe
financial difficulty after a financial audit by accounting firm
KPMG.
Television
Ramsay's first foray in television was in two
fly-on-the-kitchen-wall documentaries:
Boiling Point
(1998) and Beyond Boiling
Point (2000).
Ramsay appeared on series three of Faking
It in 2001 helping the prospective chef, a
burger flipper named Ed Devlin, learn the trade. This episode won
the 2001 BAFTA for Best Factual TV
Moment.
In 2004,
Ramsay appeared in two British
television
series. Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares
aired on Channel 4, and saw the chef
troubleshooting failing restaurants
over a one week period. This series ran its fifth season in 2007.
Hell's
Kitchen was a reality
show, which aired on ITV1, and saw Ramsay
attempt to train ten British celebrities
to be chefs, as they ran a restaurant on Brick Lane
which opened to the public for the two-week
duration of the show.
In May
2005, the Fox network
introduced Ramsay to American
audiences in a U.S. version of Hell's Kitchen produced by
Granada Entertainment and A. Smith & Co. The show
follows a similar premise as the original British series,
showcasing Ramsay's perfectionism and infamous short temper.
The show
proved to be popular enough with audiences in the United States
that, in August 2005, shortly following the Season
1 finale, Hell's Kitchen was picked up for a second
season. The show is currently wrapping up its sixth season
on FOX, and is preparing for its seventh season. In addition,
Ramsay had also hosted a US version of Kitchen Nightmares which premiered
on FOX 19 September 2007. The show's second season aired from
September, 2008 to January, 2009; in September, 2008, Fox announced
that Kitchen Nightmares would return for a third season.
His most recent series is a food-based magazine programme titled
The F-Word; it launched on
Channel 4 on 27 October 2005. The show is organised around several
key, recurring features, notably a brigade competition, a guest
cook competition, a food related investigative report and a
series-long project of raising animals to be served in the finale.
The guest cook (usually a celebrity) prepares a dish of their own
choosing and places it in competition against a similar dish
submitted by Ramsay. The dishes are judged by diners who are
unaware of who cooked which dish and, if the guest wins (as they
have on numerous occasions), their dish is served at Ramsay's
restaurant. Each series also features a series-long project of
raising animals to be used as the main course in the series finale.
In the first series of
The F-Word, Ramsay mockingly named
the turkeys he raised:
Antony,
Ainsley,
Jamie,
Delia,
Gary
and
Nigella – all in reference to
other famous celebrity chefs. During the second series, Ramsay
named the two pigs that he was raising after
Trinny Woodall and
Susannah Constantine who found the
naming highly amusing. In July 2006, Channel 4 announced that it
had re-signed Ramsay to an exclusive four-year deal at the network,
running until July 2011.
During the third series, Ramsay reared lambs
that had been selected from a farm in North Wales
and he named them after two Welsh
celebrities,
Charlotte Church and Gavin Henson. The series became one of
the highest rated shows aired on Channel 4 each week.
During
one episode of The F-Word,
Ramsay cooked in Doncaster Prison
in Marshgate for its inmates. The chef was
so impressed by the speed at which a prisoner, Kieron Tarff,
chopped vegetables that he offered him a job at his restaurant
following his release in 2007.
On 25
March 2008, according to Australian
newspaper The Herald
Sun, Ramsay was announced to have started a reality TV show
about building a restaurant in Crown Casino Melbourne,
Australia
.
In September 2009, it was reported that Ramsay is set to star in
his own
animation series, "Gordon Ramsay,
at Your Service," after reaching a deal with
Cuppa Coffee Studios.
Guest appearances
In September 2005, Ramsay, along with
Jamie
Oliver,
Heston Blumenthal,
Wolfgang Puck and
Sanjeev Kapoor, were featured in
CNN International's
Quest, in
which
Richard Quest stepped into the
shoes of celebrity chefs.
In 2006, Ramsay took part in a television series for
ITV1, following the lead-up to
Soccer Aid, a celebrity charity football
match, in which he played only the first half, nursing an injury
picked up in training. Ramsay captained the Rest of the World XI
against an England XI captained by
Robbie Williams. However, his involvement
was limited after he received a four-inch cut in his calf.
During his second
Top
Gear appearance, he stated that his current cars are a
Ferrari F430 and a
Range Rover Sport Supercharged, the latter
replacing the
Bentley Continental
GT he owned before. On 14 May 2006, he appeared on Top Gear in
the
Star in a
Reasonably-Priced Car segment. Ramsay held the top spot on
Top Gear's celebrity leader board, with a lap time of
1.46.38 until overtaken by
Simon
Cowell.
Ramsay starred in part of a
National Blood Service "Give Blood"
television advertisement, in which he said that he would have died
from a ruptured spleen had it not have been for another person's
blood donation. On 13 October 2006, he was guest host on the first
episode of
Have I Got News
for You's 32nd series. On 27 December 2007 Ramsay appeared
in the
Extras Christmas
special.
In
January 2008, Ramsay also guest featured on Channel 4's
Big
Brother: Celebrity Hijack
as the Big
Brother housemates took part in his Cookalong
Live television show. Gordon spoke directly to the Big
Brother House via the house plasma screens, regularly checking on
the progress of the contestants.
Legal proceedings
In June
2006, Ramsay won a High Court
case against the London Evening Standard
newspaper, in which Victor Lewis
Smith had alleged, after reports from previous owner Sue Ray,
that scenes and the general condition of Bonaparte's had been faked
for Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares. Ramsay was awarded
£75,000 plus costs. Ramsay said at the time: "I won't let people
write anything they want to about me. We have never done anything
in a cynical fake way".
In June 2007, Ramsay's show was again sued, alleging fakery, this
time by the terminated general manager (Martin Hyde) of the New
York restaurant Purnima (Dillon's). The lawsuit alleged that
"unknown to the viewing audience, some or all of
Kitchen Nightmares are fake and the
so-called 'problems uncovered and solved' by Ramsay are, for the
most part, created by Ramsay and his staff for the purpose of
making it appear that Ramsay is improving the restaurant". However,
in August 2007, the case was dismissed voluntarily and ordered into
arbitration as stipulated in their
contract.
Public image and reception
Personality
Ramsay's reputation is built upon his goal of culinary perfection.
Since the airing of
Boiling Point which followed Ramsay's
quest of earning three Michelin stars, the chef has also become
infamous for his fiery temperament and use of expletives. Ramsay
once famously ejected food critic
A.
A. Gill along
with his dining companion,
Joan
Collins, from his restaurant, leading Gill to state that
"Ramsay is a wonderful chef, just a really second-rate human
being". Ramsay admitted in his autobiography that he did not mind
if Gill insulted his food, but a personal insult he was not going
to stand for. Ramsay has also had confrontations with his kitchen
staff, including one incident that resulted in the pastry chef
calling the police. Despite his fevered actions, Ramsay has a loyal
staff and claims an 85% retention rate since 1993.
Ramsay attributes his pugnacious management style to the influence
of previous mentors, notably chefs
Marco Pierre White and
Guy Savoy, father-in-law and business partner
Chris Hutcheson, and
Jock Wallace, his
manager while a footballer at Rangers, although Wallace has stated
that he never knew Ramsay when he was a player.
Ramsay's ferocious temper has contributed to his media appeal in
both the United Kingdom and the United States, where his programmes
are currently produced. His fierce personality ensured that he was
voted television's most terrifying celebrity in a
Radio Times poll consisting of 3,000
people.
MSN Careers featured an article about
television's worst bosses, which listed Ramsay as the only
non-fictional boss. They cited his frequent loss of his temper and
his harsh critiques, notably when he picks on something other than
one's cooking abilities, such as calling someone a "chunky
monkey."
Although Ramsay often mocks the
French, two of his most trusted
maître d's, Jean-Baptiste Requien (who works
for Ramsay at
Gordon Ramsay at The London NYC and
Gordon Ramsay's Maze at The London NYC) and Jean-Claude
Breton (
Royal Hospital Road), are French. Jean-Baptiste is
also a regular on many of Ramsay's television programs, including
The F Word.
Having once claimed that women couldn't "cook to save their lives",
in November 2007 Ramsay installed 29 year-old Clare Smyth as head
chef at his three-Michelin-starred flagship restaurant on London’s
Royal Hospital Road. Smyth is the second high profile appointment
of a female chef by Ramsay, after
Angela
Hartnett.
Ramsay has been criticized for his frequent use of
profanity on his programmes, first by British
celebrity cook
Delia Smith, then, in
relation to
Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares, by a member of
the Federal
Parliament of
Australia. In his autobiography, Ramsay himself said he was
unaware of the extent of his swearing until he watched an episode
of
Boiling Point. While he stated he did not have a
problem with it, "Mum was appalled".
On 5 June 2009, Ramsay started trading national TV insults with
Australia's
Nine
Network,
A Current
Affair journalist
Tracy
Grimshaw. The day after his interview, he was a guest feature
at the Melbourne Food and Wine festival. While doing his display,
he added some comments revolving around Tracy. He described Tracy
as a 'Pig', and questioned her sexuality, calling her a lesbian'.
It is claimed that Ramsay questioned Grimshaw's sexuality and her
looks saying a picture of a nude woman with multiple breasts on all
fours with a pig's face resembled Grimshaw. Grimshaw hit back at
Ramsay, calling him an "arrogant
narcissist bully" and implied Ramsay is a husband
who mistreats his wife. Ramsay eventually apologized, stating that
it "was a joke".
Ramsay has also drawn the ire of
vegetarians. In 2005, he served ham to an
unknowing vegetarian. He has also told the BBC that he has "lied"
to vegetarian diners to conceal the presence of chicken stock in
his soup.
Food views
On the second series of
The F Word Ramsay showed a
softened stance after learning about
intensive pig farming practices
including
castration
and
tail
docking. On the programme, Ramsay commented, "It's enough to
make anyone turn fucking vegetarian, for God's sake. And I've
always sort of knocked
vegetarians and
vegans for missing out on the most amazing
flavour you can get from meat. But you can see why so many people
change instantly."
Some
controversy arose in the third series of The F Word when
journalist Janet Street-Porter,
who thought horse meat should be eaten
more widely in Britain, attempted to serve horse steaks and quiche
at Cheltenham
Racecourse
during Gold Cup Week
. The police prevented her from doing this,
and deemed the stunt "highly provocative". She subsequently served
the meat from a private property; most of the consumers shown in
the programme approved. The conclusion of both Street-Porter and
Ramsay was that horse meat merited a more prominent place in
Britain's national diet. In the wake of the stunt, representatives
of animal rights group
PETA protested by
dumping a tonne of
horse manure outside
Ramsay's restaurant at Claridge's in central London.
Other chefs
Ramsay has been highly critical of
Food
Network and
Iron Chef
America star
Mario Batali and
has caused a feud that has led Batali to ban Ramsay from his
restaurants. The feud goes back to when Batali was highly critical
of Ramsay's cooking style for being "dull and outdated".
Personal life
Ramsay married Cayetana Elizabeth Hutcheson (known as Tana), a
Montessori-trained schoolteacher, in
1996. The couple have four children: Megan Jane (b. 1998), twins
Jack Scott and Holly Anna (b. 2000), and Matilda Elizabeth (b.
2002). Ramsay's father-in-law, Chris Hutcheson, is responsible for
the business operations of Ramsay's restaurant empire.
In 1994 Ramsay accepted a police caution for
gross indecency involving him and two other
men, both chefs, in the lavatory of a London Underground station.
It was stressed to be only "hi jinks" by Ramsay and not
sexual.
On 15
November 2002, Ramsay was breathalysed,
arrested, and charged with driving under
the influence of excess alcohol in London
.
While he remained charged, he was informed by police that the case
would be discontinued.
In 2007, Ramsay admitted arranging for a biker to steal the
reservations book from the Aubergine restaurant in 1998 and blaming
the theft on
Marco Pierre White,
because he suspected Aubergine's owners were planning to offer his
job to Pierre White.
Ramsay is of above average height, standing at . On his show
Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares, Ramsay has stated that he is
afraid of dancing, especially in front of people. On a later
episode, at La Gondola, he decided to "confront his demons" and is
seen dancing. Ramsay also demonstrates the
moonwalk dance in the episode of
Kitchen Nightmares spotlighting Mama Cherri's Soul Food
Shack. He also learns to
salsa dance
on an episode of the F-Word. Ramsay is left-handed.
Charity work
Ramsay has been involved in a series of charitable events and
organisations. On 26 April 2009, Ramsay ran his 10th consecutive
London Marathon, sponsoring the
Scottish Spina Bifida Association. In 2004, he and his wife, Tana,
raised £14,000 for Tommy's. Ramsay commented: "I'm proud to have
run the Marathon for Tommy's, the baby charity - their cause is one
very close to my heart, especially as my own twins were born three
weeks prematurely in 1999". He aims to complete ten marathons in
consecutive years.
During March 2005 Ramsay teamed up with Indian chef
Madhur Jaffrey to help the
VSO, an
international development charity group to support its
Spice Up Your Life event.
The charity hoped to raise £100,000 for
VSO’s work in HIV and AIDS in India
. The
Ramsays were the first couple to become ambassadors for the women's
charity
Women's Aid in 2005. The couple
ran the Flora Families marathon to support Women's Aid.
The Gordon Ramsay "Buy a Brick" appeal launched in September 2004
helped the Scottish Spina Bifida Association build a new Family
Support Centre and Head Office in Glasgow.
In November 2007
Ramsay hosted a St Andrew's Day Gala Dinner at Stirling
Castle
in aid of the Association.
Near death experience
In 2008,
Ramsay was in Iceland
's Westman
Islands
filming a puffin hunting
segment when he lost his footing and fell during a descent of an
85m cliff, landing in the icy water below. He has said "I
thought I was a goner", reaching the surface of the water by
removing his heavy boots and waterproof clothing. His film crew,
who rescued Ramsay by throwing him a rope, say that he was
submerged for at least 45 seconds. During the ordeal he remembers
how he felt: "I was panicking and my lungs were filling with water.
When I got to the top after getting my boots off I was dazed and my
head was totallynumb."At first, Ramsay did not want to tell his
wife. "I chickened out but she knew something was up. She was upset
and extremely pissed off. When I was underwater, all I could think
of was Tana and my kids. It wasn't until I was on the plane home I
realised what a close call I'd had."
Accusations of infidelity
In late November 2008, the British tabloid
News of the World published a news
story wherein Sarah Symonds, author of the book
Having An
Affair? A Handbook For The Other Woman, claimed to
have been involved in a secret affair with Ramsay for a period of
seven to ten years.. Symonds further notes that Ramsay had been
involved with at least two other women, as well.
Amidst the
allegations, the family put off a holiday in Mauritius
, and Ramsay, initially ignoring the allegations,
denied them during a live BBC show cooking
demonstration, Good Food
Show. An Australian woman has also made similar
claims, while Ramsay denies even knowing the woman.
Richard Harden, co-publisher of the
Harden's Restaurant Guide, speaking to the
Evening Standard, concurs.
"It must damage the package". , though publicist
Max Clifford disagrees, noting that while the
allegations might cause "a lot of aggravation" at home, it wouldn't
impact his image and popularity "at all".
Frozen 'ready meal' controversy
On 17 April 2009 it was revealed that Ramsay's restaurant, Foxtrot
Oscar in Chelsea, west London, used pre-prepared food that was
heated up and sold with mark-ups of up to 586%. It was also
revealed that three of his gastropubs in London did the same
thing.
""Gordon Ramsay Holdings operate a kitchen facility in Wandsworth
called GR Logistics (which was purchased from Albert Roux)...""the
spokesperson said.
A spokeswoman for Gordon Ramsay explained, "Gordon Ramsay chefs
prepare components of dishes devised and produced to the highest
Gordon Ramsay standards. These are supplied to those kitchens with
limited cooking space such as Foxtrot Oscar and Gordon Ramsay's
highly-acclaimed pubs, including the Narrow. These are sealed and
transported daily in refrigerated vans and all menu dishes are then
cooked in the individual kitchens. This is only for the supply of
Foxtrot Oscar and the three pubs and allows each establishment to
control the consistency and the quality of the food served."
This agrees with comments that Ramsay made in 2007, when he said
"using fresh ingredients is the only way to guarantee a great taste
and I can't understand how people can ignore fresh food. That's
where all the flavour is, all the goodness, and it's a crime not to
use it."
Restaurants
These lists are of restaurants currently and formerly run or owned
by Ramsay:
United Kingdom
- Restaurant Gordon Ramsay at Royal Hospital Road (three
Michelin stars), Mark Askew
(executive chef), Clare Smyth (head chef)
- Pétrus at the Berkeley Hotel (two Michelin stars),
Marcus Wareing (executive chef)
(until 2008)
- Gordon Ramsay at Claridge's
, Steve Allen (head chef)
- The Boxwood Café at the Berkeley Hotel, Stuart Gillies (executive chef)
- La Noisette
(one Michelin star) Sloane Street
(closed)
- Maze, (one Michelin star) Jason Atherton (executive
chef)
- Foxtrot Oscar
- Maze Grill, Marriott Hotel in Grosvenor Square
- Gordon Ramsay's Plane Food at London Heathrow Airport
Terminal 5
- York and Albany located in Ramsay's first hotel (only
10 rooms), Regents Park, Angela
Hartnett (executive chef), opened in July 2008
- Murano (one Michelin star), Mayfair, Angela Hartnett (executive chef), opened
2008
Pubs
- The Narrow
- The Devonshire House
- The Warrington
International
- Gordon Ramsay at The London (two
Michelin stars), New
York
, Josh Emett (chef de cuisine)
- Maze by Gordon Ramsay at The
London, New York
City

- Verre at the Hilton Dubai Creek
, Dubai
- Gordon Ramsay at Conrad Tokyo,
Tokyo

- Cerise by Gordon Ramsay, Tokyo
- Cielo by Angela Hartnett, Boca Raton,
Florida
, Christopher Eagle
(head chef)
- Gordon Ramsay at the Ritz-Carlton, Powerscourt
, Co.
Wicklow
, Ireland
- Maze by Gordon Ramsay at The Hilton Prague Old Town
, Prague
, Czech
Republic
, Phillip
Carmichael (head chef)
- Gordon Ramsay at The London,
West
Hollywood
(one
Michelin Star)
- Gordon Ramsay at The Trianon Palace (two Michelin
stars), Versailles near Paris, Simone Zanoni (head chef)
- Boxwood Café, across from Gordon
Ramsay restaurant in Los
Angeles
.
- Gordon Ramsay at The Atlantis Sentosa
Resort, Singapore
(Part of Kerzner-CapitaLand's bid for the Sentosa
Integrated Resort Plan for 2010 which lost to the Genting/Star
Cruises consortium in their bid for Resorts World
Sentosa.)
- Undisclosed project, Toronto
- Planned to open 12–18 months from February 2009
according to Ramsay interview on The Hour, aired 9
February 2009.
- Maze by Gordon Ramsay at One and Only Hotel, Cape Town
, South Africa, opened doors on 2 April 2009 with
first guests being Nelson Mandela and
Sol Kerzner.
Filmography
Notable television appearances
Bibliography
Since 1996, Ramsay has written 20 books. Ramsay also contributes a
food-and-drink column to
The
Times' Saturday magazine.
- Gordon Ramsay’s Passion For Flavour (1996)
- Gordon Ramsay’s Passion For Seafood (1999)
- Gordon Ramsay A Chef For All Seasons (2000)
- Gordon Ramsay’s Just Desserts (2001)
- Gordon Ramsay’s Secrets (2003)
- Gordon Ramsay’s Kitchen Heaven (2004)
- Gordon Ramsay Makes It Easy (2005)
- Gordon Ramsay Easy All Year Round (2006)
- Gordon Ramsay's Sunday Lunch and other recipes from the F
word (2006)
- Roasting in Hell's Kitchen (2006)
- Humble Pie (2006) (Autobiography)
- Gordon Ramsay's Fast Food Recipes from the F Word
(2007)
- Playing With Fire (2007) (Follow up to
Autobiography)
- Recipes From a 3 Star Chef (2007)
- Gordon Ramsay's Healthy Appetite (2008)
- Cooking for Friends: Food from My Table (2008)
- Master Chefs Series
- Pasta Sauces (1996)
- Fish And Shellfish (1997)
- Cook Cards
- Hot Dinners (2006)
- Cool Sweets (2006)
References
- Gordon Ramsay - The man - Biography
- Robuchon, with restaurants in Hong Kong and Macau, holds a
record total of 18 Michelin stars, followed by Alain Ducasse with
15, Gordon Ramsay with 10 and Thomas Keller, with seven.
- "Chef from a humble background", The Oxford
Times, 9 November 2006
- Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares
episode "Bonapartes"
- http://observer.guardian.co.uk/osm/story/0,,708139,00.html
- http://www.gordonramsay.com/corporate/theman/timeline/
-
http://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/yourtown/oxford/4167121.Mystery_over_Gordon_Ramsay_s_claims_he_played_for_Oxford_United/
-
http://www.newsoftheworld.co.uk/news/198460/Ramsay-is-an-F-ing-liar-Cheating-chef-Gordon-Ramsay-lied-about-his-glory-days-at-Glasgow-Rangers.html
-
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1158283/How-Gordon-Ramsay-lied-football-career-raise-celebrity-profile.html
- Ramsay's kitchen nightmare: Gordon admits his ego nearly
destroyed his restaurant empire
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1189843/Ramsays-kitchen-nightmare-Gordon-admits-ego-nearly-destroyed-restaurant-empire.html
-
http://www.tv.com/faking-it/burger-flipper-to-chef/episode/205024/summary.html
- http://www.classictvhits.com/show.php?id=586
- "The Kumars at No 42 returns to BBC One".
BBC Press Office. Retrieved on 14 February 2007.
- " Laid Bare". The Daily Mirror.
Retrieved 29 August 2007.
- "[Weekly Viewing Summary (scroll to w.e 13/05/07 - 08/07/07]".
BARB. Retrieved 29
August 2007.
- " Ramsay is scariest TV celebrity". The Daily
Mail. Retrieved on 27 August 2007.
- Jean-Baptiste Requien at The London Bar -
GordonRamsay.com
- NY Post Interview with Jean-Baptiste
Requien
- Yahoo 7, Ramsay: I didn't call Tracy a
lesbian
- Tracy Grimshaw calls Gordon Ramsay an arrogant
narcissist NEWS.com.au. June 08, 2009
- The F-Word, Series 2, Episode 6 2006.07.26
- " The night Janet Street-Porter ate horse meat".
Daily Mail. Retrieved on 16 May 2007.
-
http://www.nypost.com/seven/01272009/gossip/pagesix/mario_to_gordon__stay_away__152167.htm
- Spice Up Your Life in 2005 - Media Releases
- Family Marathon
- Women's Aid - Press - Celebrity
Spokespeople
- I thought I would die: Gordon Ramsay
- Ramsay: I feared I was a goner | The Sun
|Showbiz|TV
- Celebrity Chef Gordon Ramsay revealed to mistress
Sarah Symonds that he had TWO other lovers.
- Pop Tarts: Kim Kardashian's Days of Stripping Off
Are Over
- 'Cheating' Gordon Ramsay cashes in on family man
image with ad featuring wife Tana and his four children
- High 'infidelity': Gordon Ramsay sex scandal
latest
- Gordon Ramsay Denies Affair Feature Story
- Exposed: Sydney's Miss X who claims Ramsay
affair
- Ramsay Hit by New Affair Claims
- Now ANOTHER blonde claims she had an affair with
chef Gordon Ramsay
- Gordon Ramsay Denies Affair
- Ramsay's wife braves storm over his 'secret
affair'
- Gordon Ramsay affair claim 'could damage business
empire'
-
http://news.scotsman.com/latestnews/Ramsay39s-new-Fword-frozen-ready.5182757.jp
-
http://www.tv.com/gordon-ramsay-defends-prepared-food/story/14021.html
- Gordon Ramsay eats his own words -
Telegraph
- Josh Emett at Restaurant Gordon Ramsay at The
London
Further reading
External links