Tommy Banks has been lauded as the country’s most exciting young chef, growing and foraging produce from his Oldstead surroundings and transferring it to inventive plates at The Black Swan, which has gained Michelin Stars and been hailed as the best restaurant in the world. Tommy has recently opened a new place in York, Roots, and here talks us through his chef’s story so far…


I got into food totally by accident. After growing up on a farm, my parents bought the local pub when I was 17; I had little interest in cooking at the time. Then, from 18 to 20, I became ill with ulcerative colitis, which meant I couldn’t play sport or go out drinking, so I started spending my time at the restaurant and learning how to cook.

Doing this wasn’t always natural for me. Growing up on a farm helped because of the relationship with food and the seasons, but I was basically reading chef’s books and following their recipes. By 24, in some parts, I was suddenly hailed as a genius, when to me all I’d done was copy others. As if to justify the recognition, I really concentrated on the garden, growing fruit and veg, foraging for ingredients to be served on the menu.

This method promotes creativity, to be inventive and use everything, which fits with my values towards food. We have a responsibility to be sustainable, and use the finest local ingredients; I’ve had that drilled into me from day one. A lot of the dishes are therefore healthy, but that is not the focus – it’s nice to also have something damn naughty!

With some of our combinations, from the outside it can look like ‘how did they come up with this?’, but for us it’s normal, we’re just growing different ingredients. It becomes a natural thought process and it is our palette to create these dishes. We had to force some ideas at the start but after a few years it started to work and now comes naturally. It is important that we keep the same thought process, of being creative and always getting better.

That is one reason why Roots is totally different to The Black Swan, as it’s never a good idea to clone what you already have. Oldstead is a destination for a special visit, and whilst York isn’t not special, it is more casual, we can open through the day and accept walk-ins. I enjoy the differences, plus being less isolated and simply having shops around is a revelation – if something breaks in the kitchen I can just cross the road to replace it instead of waiting for deliveries!

The reason we chose York to open the new restaurant was partly because it is the closest big city to Oldstead, and also because it is a beautiful city that is starting to thrive. Until recently there were few independent restaurants, now there are lots; fantastic people have been popping up at awesome places like Skosh and Le Cochon Aveugle, and my secret favourite is just outside York in Newton-on-Ouse, The Dawney Arms; I’m there most weeks for their Sunday lunch…

Since gaining recognition and expanding, of course my daily routine has changed. I used to simply be head chef at The Black Swan and so all my time was spent cooking there, now I move between places and help out when and where I need to. The ethos is the same, though you have to change the infrastructure and keep improving, so now there is a development chef and such a wide bunch of people.

That’s the funny thing about hospitality: it is accepting of everybody, which I don’t think is found in other industries. You don’t need to have been to uni or got a degree to join or be successful. And there are increasingly more women working, fantastic female chefs, which is an important shift in what can be a very testosterone led world. It is becoming all encompassing, which is great.

I was fortunate to get into the industry when these things were changing. Chefs still work extremely hard, but without the stereotypical aggressive attitude. It was no good for anybody, because if someone is petrified, they’re not going to make good food. Like with all bullies, it’s a vicious circle, when one stops everyone stops, and hopefully that behaviour is a thing of the past.

I’ve also never got the whole chefs eating crap outside of work thing. I enjoy cooking nice stuff at home, eating well; though obviously not how we make dishes at the restaurants because that would take too much time! And we love eating out, having a nice bottle of wine; enjoying food and drink, that’s just what we like to do.