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Top chef Ryan Honey reveals the cheap place he loves - and the overrated chain he would avoid

Top chef Ryan Honey reveals the cheap place he loves - and the overrated chain he would avoid

Sky News05-06-2025
Every Thursday, our Money blog team interviews chefs from around the UK, hearing about their cheap food hacks and more. This week, we chat to Ryan Honey, head chef at The Duke in Henley-on-Thames.
The best chef in the UK is… Mark Birchall at Moor Hall, hands down.
The guy has just bagged three Michelin stars, and if that doesn't make him the best in the country right now, I don't know what does.
His food is next-level, the kind of stuff that makes chefs jealous.
If you're not dreaming of eating at Moor Hall, are you even serious about food?
The worst type of behaviour in kitchens is… people who walk in thinking they're Gordon Ramsay before they've even mastered chopping an onion.
I once had a guy in an interview tell me he didn't believe in "kitchen hierarchy" and that he'd "rather collaborate than take orders".
Safe to say, he didn't make it past the trial shift.
A kitchen runs on discipline and respect - if you don't get that, you're in the wrong industry.
The one thing you never, ever want to see on a menu again is... snails.
I know, I know, the French will come for me, but I just don't get it.
They're chewy, they taste like whatever you drown them in, and honestly, I'd rather eat the garlic butter on its own.
Some things just don't need to be on a plate - snails are one of them.
A tip that non-chefs might not know to make them a better cook or make a certain ingredient better… salt your meat way earlier than you think you should.
Like, hours before.
Let it sit and soak in. Most home cooks season just before cooking, but if you give salt time to do its thing, the flavour goes deep, and you get a better crust.
Also, stop being scared of butter. It makes everything better.
The one thing you hate that some customers do is… ordering a steak well done and then complaining it's tough.
Mate, you just asked me to cremate a £40 piece of meat - what did you expect?
Also, people who rush the kitchen when they can see we're at full tilt.
You came for a good meal, not a drive-thru burger - relax, have a drink, and trust us to do our job.
One cheap place I love to eat is... The Bird in Hand in Sandhurst.
It's one of those old-school, no-nonsense pubs where the food is actually good rather than just being "good for a pub".
I always get the satay chicken kebabs with chips and salad -simple, tasty, and always bang on.
One way we save money is... cutting waste by only ordering what we need daily, we make sure everything gets used, and negotiating hard with suppliers.
Could the government help? Of course - lower VAT for hospitality, better support for small businesses, and maybe a bit of regulation on wholesale food pricing wouldn't go amiss.
But until then, we just have to keep adapting.
My tip for preventing waste is… use everything.
Peel, stems, bones, offcuts - there's always a way to get more out of your ingredients.
We dehydrate veg peelings and turn them into powders for seasoning, use bones for stocks, and any decent trimmings go into pies or terrines.
Waste isn't just bad for the planet; it's literally throwing money in the bin.
My favourite restaurant chain is… Miller & Carter.
It's just solid, well-cooked steak.
If I'm sharing, it's the côte de boeuf every time.
But if we're talking about overrated chains?
Nando's.
Sorry, but it's just chicken with some decent seasoning - why are we all acting like it's some kind of life-changing experience?
One ingredient you should never skimp on is… a proper olive oil.
A cheap one is pointless - it's like drinking bad wine.
But I'll give rapeseed oil some credit; a good cold-pressed one can be great for cooking at high temps.
Still, for dressings, finishing, or dipping bread? Olive oil all the way. You get what you pay for.
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Labour still have four years to deliver on this pledge, but each year they are behind means they need to up the rate more in future years. If the 200,000 new EPCs in the year to March 2025 matches the number of new homes they have delivered in their first year, Labour will need to add an average of 325,000 per year for the rest of their time in power to achieve their goal. VERDICT: Struggling to lay solid foundations Clean power by 2030 Another of the more ambitious pledges, Labour's aim is for the UK to produce 95% of its energy from renewable sources by 2030. They started strong. The ban on new onshore wind turbines was lifted within their first few days of government, and they delivered support for 131 new renewable energy projects in the most recent funding round in September. But - understandably - it takes time for those new wind farms, solar farms and tidal plants to be built and start contributing to the grid. In the year leading up to Starmer's election as leader, 54% of the energy on the UK grid had been produced by renewable sources in the UK. That has risen very slightly in the year since then, to 55%, with a rise in solar and biomass offsetting a slight fall in wind generation. The start of this year has been unusually lacking in wind, and this analysis does not take variations in weather into account. The government target will adjust for that, but they are yet to define exactly how. VERDICT: Not all up in smoke, but consistent effort is required before it's all sunshine and windmills Fastest economic growth in the G7 Labour's plan to pay for the improvements they want to make in all the public services we have talked about above can be summarised in one word: "growth". The aim is for the UK's GDP - the financial value of all the goods and services produced in the country - to grow faster than any other in the G7 group of advanced economies. Since Labour have been in power, the economy has grown faster than European rivals Italy, France and Germany, as well as Japan, but has lagged behind the US and Canada. The UK did grow fastest in the most recent quarter we have data for, however, from the start of the year to the end of March. VERDICT: Good to be ahead of other similar European economies, but still a way to go to overtake the North Americans No tax rises Without economic growth, it will be difficult to keep to one of Chancellor Rachel Reeves' biggest promises - that there will be no more tax rises or borrowing for the duration of her government's term. Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said last month that she is a 'gnat's whisker' away from being forced to do that at the autumn budget, looking at the state of the economy at the moment. That whisker will have been shaved even closer by the cost implications of the government's failure to get its full welfare reform bill through parliament earlier this week. And income tax thresholds are currently frozen until April 2028, meaning there is already a "stealth" hike scheduled for all of us every year. 5:03 But the news from the last financial year was slightly better than expected. Total tax receipts for the year ending March 2025 were 35% of GDP. That's lower than the previous four years, and what was projected after Jeremy Hunt's final Conservative budget, but higher than any of the 50 years before that. The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) still projects it to rise in future years though, to a higher level than the post-WWII peak of 37.2%. The OBR - a non-departmental public body that provides independent analysis of the public finances - has also said in the past few days that it is re-examining its methodology, because it has been too optimistic with its forecasts in the past. If the OBR's review leads to a more negative view of where the economy is going, Rachel Reeves could be forced to break her promise to keep the budget deficit from spiralling out of control. OVERALL VERDICT: Investment and attention towards things like violent crime, the NHS and clean energy are yet to start bearing fruit, with only minuscule shifts in the right direction for each, but the government is confident that what's happened so far is part of its plans. Labour always said that the house-building target would be achieved with a big surge towards the back end of their term, but they won't be encouraged by the numbers actually dropping in their first few months. Where they are failing most dramatically, however, appears to be in reducing the number of migrants making the dangerous Channel crossing on small boats. The economic news, particularly that rise in disposable income, looks more healthy at the moment. But with inflation still high and growth lagging behind some of our G7 rivals, that could soon start to turn. The Data and Forensics

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