Kiwi-born Melbourne-based chef Ben Shewry, author of a new cookbook, impresses with his food philosophy.
As a journalist you remember some interviews more than others. When I arrived at Melbourne's award-winning restaurant Attica more than a year ago to talk to New Zealand-born chef Ben Shewry, I couldn't have known that an hour later I would stumble out of there, into the midday sun, and burst into tears.
Talking to Shewry had moved me in ways I hadn't expected. The gentle intensity with which he approaches his craft and everything else he does, from raising a young family to heading up the kitchen of this world-class restaurant to travelling the world sharing his philosophies on what chefs can be doing to preserve the future of our food, had me astounded and humbled.
His words still burn in my brain. "Chefs can decide the fate of a species. Our responsibility as chefs is to be informed and to act". And act he did, taking finned fish off the menu at Attica after discovering that the sustainability plan for most finned species was precarious at best.
A lot has happened in the 12 months since we last spoke; Shewry is now well and truly sought after as a guest chef at the most prestigious food symposiums and gatherings world-wide, Attica continues to win awards for its innovation and excellence and Shewry has just published his first cookbook, Origin.