Clare Smyth Explained

Clare Smyth, MBE
Birth Date:28 November 1978
Birth Place:County Antrim, Northern Ireland
Spouse:Grant
Style:Modern British
Education:Dunluce School Bushmills
Restaurants:Core by Clare Smyth
Oncore
Prevrests:
Television:
Awards:
  • Young Cornish Fish Chef of the Year
  • Retained 3 Michelin stars
  • 10/10 Good Food Guide 2015
  • Chef of The Year Good Food Guide 2013
  • 5 AA rosettes
  • Best female chef in Great Britain and Ireland
  • Core by Clare Smyth named Best Restaurant at the 2018 GQ Food and Drink Awards
  • World's Best Female Chef 2018 by The World's 50 Best Restaurants
  • SECOND -->

Clare Smyth (born 28 November 1978) is a Northern Irish chef. She is the Chef Patron of three Michelin starred Core by Clare Smyth which opened in 2017. Previously she was Chef Patron at Restaurant Gordon Ramsay from 2012 to 2016, won the Chef of the Year award in 2013,[1] and achieved a perfect score in the 2015 edition of the Good Food Guide.[2] Smyth has also appeared on television shows such as Masterchef[3] and Saturday Kitchen.[4] Smyth also notably catered at Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's 2018 wedding.[5]

In 2017, Smyth opened her first restaurant, Core, in London. It was awarded three Michelin stars in the 2021 Michelin Guide,[6] [7] which made her the first Northern Irish[8] woman to have a restaurant awarded three Michelin stars.[9] [10] Her second restaurant, Oncore, opened in Sydney in 2021. With Oncore gaining Three Hats honour in 2022, Smyth became the first ever female chef and second overall to gain three Michelin Stars and become a Three-Hatted Chef. The news was also mentioned when she was a guest judge in Season 15 of MasterChef Australia.[11]

Early life

Smyth grew up on a farm in County Antrim. She is the youngest of three children, of her father William, a farmer, and mother Doreen, who worked as a waitress at a local restaurant.[12]

At the age of fifteen, Smyth held a job over a holiday period at a local restaurant, inspiring her to become a chef. She left school at sixteen to study catering at Highbury College in Portsmouth, Hampshire.[12] [13]

Culinary career

While at culinary college,[12] Smyth served an apprenticeship at Grayshott Hall, Surrey. She left that post to work full-time at Terence Conran's restaurant at Michelin House, London. She followed this with a six-month period in Australia working for a catering company,[12] and on her return to the UK she staged at a variety of restaurants including The Waterside Inn and Gidleigh Park.[13] She worked at the restaurant of the St Enodoc Hotel in Rock, Cornwall, first as sous chef and then as head chef.[12] While there, she won the title of Young Cornish Fish Chef of the Year.

In 2002, Gordon Ramsay offered Smyth a post at Restaurant Gordon Ramsay.[13] In 2007, she was announced as the new head chef of Restaurant Gordon Ramsay,[14] becoming the first female chef in the United Kingdom to run a restaurant with three Michelin stars.[15] Of the 121 British Michelin-starred restaurants at the time of her appointment, only seven had female head chefs.[16] She had left Ramsay's restaurant to work for a year and a half in Alain Ducasse's Le Louis XV restaurant in Monaco, before returning once more to the UK to run the Chelsea-based restaurant.[15] She took over from Simone Zanoni, who was heading to Versailles to open a new Gordon Ramsay restaurant.[15]

In 2013, Smyth was named the Good Food Guide's 'National Chef of the Year'.[1] Smyth was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2013 Birthday Honours for services to the hospitality industry.[17]

Smyth was awarded a perfect ten score by the Good Food Guide of the UK's 2015.[2]

She won the Chef Award at the 2016 The Catey Awards,[18] previously won by her mentor Gordon Ramsay in 2000.[19]

2016–2021: Core and Oncore

Smyth left Restaurant Gordon Ramsay in 2016 to open her first solo restaurant, Core.[20] Core opened in London's Notting Hill neighbourhood in July 2017.[21] In April 2018, Core was named Best Restaurant at the GQ Food and Drink Awards.[22]

Smyth was named the World's Best Female Chef 2018 by the World's 50 Best Restaurants.[14] In 2018, Smyth appeared as a judge in the "UK" episode of The Final Table, season 1.

On 1 October 2018, Core was awarded two Michelin stars in the 2019 Michelin Guide.[23] Core was awarded three Michelin stars in the 2021 Michelin Guide, which made her the first British woman to have a restaurant awarded three Michelin stars.

In early 2021, it was reported that Smyth would open a restaurant in Sydney, Australia.[24] Oncore, on the 26th floor of the Crown Sydney in Barangaroo opened in November 2021 with head chef Alan Stuart.[25]

A review in Bloomberg described Oncore as "Sydney's best restaurant". Due to ongoing border restrictions to prevent the transmission of Covid-19, Smyth was not able to be at the opening.[26]

Personal life

Smyth lives in Wandsworth with her husband, Grant, who works in finance.[24]

Notes and References

  1. News: Good Food Guide's National Chef of the Year, 2013. The Good Food Guide. 12 February 2019. Waitrose.
  2. News: Gerrard. Neil. Clare Smyth scores 10/10 in Good Food Guide at Restaurant Gordon Ramsay. 10 July 2015. The Caterer. 26 August 2014. Travel Weekly Group.
  3. Web site: Is Clare Smyth The Toughest Chef Ever?. 2017-07-11. 10 play. en-AU. 2019-06-28.
  4. Web site: Saturday Kitchen: 26/02/2011. BBC Food. en. 2019-06-28.
  5. News: Chandler-Wilde. Helen. 2021-07-20. Clare Smyth: I don't know any male chef who has taken paternity leave. en-GB. The Telegraph. 2021-11-13. 0307-1235.
  6. Web site: Core by Clare Smyth - London: a Michelin Guide restaurant. Via Michelin. 12 February 2019.
  7. Web site: Why you will be hearing a lot about this new London Restaurant. Eater.com. 2 August 2017. 3 May 2018. Vox Media.
  8. News: Saner. Emine. Clare Smyth: The Irish chef with three Michelin stars – and the poshest potato ever. 2021-02-13. The Irish Times. en.
  9. Web site: Clare Smyth, UK's first female three-star Michelin winner: It's been unbelievably stressful. TheGuardian.com. 29 January 2021.
  10. Web site: Good news stories you might have missed this week. 29 January 2021.
  11. Web site: Clare Smyth's Career Timeline . 2023-07-04 . ClareSmyth.com . en.
  12. News: Day. Elizabeth. She dresses food like Picasso. 29 January 2012. The Guardian. 16 December 2007.
  13. News: Women chefs: Clare Smyth, Skye Gyngell, Thomasina Miers, Maria Elia, Emily Watkins. 29 January 2012. The Telegraph. 18 October 2009.
  14. News: Aitkenhead. Decca. Clare Smyth, world's best female chef: 'I'm not going to stand and shout at someone. It's just not nice'. 2018-08-03. The Guardian. 2020-04-21. en-GB. 0261-3077.
  15. News: Gardham. Duncan. Peterkin, Tom. Revealed: First three Michelin star female chef. 29 January 2012. The Telegraph. 27 November 2007.
  16. News: Gordon Ramsay eats his own words. 29 January 2012. The Telegraph. 20 January 2008.
  17. News: Top chef Smyth 'honoured' by MBE. Belfast Telegraph. 14 June 2013.
  18. Web site: Cateys 2016 winners revealed. 2016-07-06. The Caterer. en. 2020-04-21.
  19. Web site: Catey Awards 2020 - Home Page. Group. Travel Weekly. cateys.com. en. 2020-04-21.
  20. Web site: Chef Clare Smyth is leaving Restaurant Gordon Ramsay to open her own place. Vox Media. 3 May 2018. 2 October 2015. Eater.com.
  21. Web site: Core by Clare Smyth - London. OpenTable.com. 3 May 2018.
  22. Web site: The winners of the GQ Food and Drink Awards 2018. British GQ. 23 April 2018. en-GB. 2020-04-21.
  23. Web site: Michelin Guide Great Britain and Ireland 2019 Selection. Michelin Guide. 12 February 2019.
  24. Web site: Butter. Susannah. 2021-01-28. Clare Smyth: 'Restaurants are struggling to survive now'. 2021-11-13. www.standard.co.uk. en.
  25. Web site: Barangaroo's jewel Oncore by Clare Smyth to finally open. The Sydney Morning Herald. David. Matthews. 2 November 2021. 27 June 2023.
  26. News: Vercoe. Peter. At Sydney's Best New Restaurant, Reservations Are Gone in Minutes. live. Bloomberg. 16 December 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211218014320/https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-12-16/oncore-by-clare-smyth-review-sydney-s-best-new-restaurant . 18 December 2021 .