Parkhaven Flats residents [L-R]Margaret Walker, and Pat Ogilvie gratefully accept pudding and a vegetable bake from Peter Johnson. Photo / Warren Buckland
Hastings man Peter Johnson, 74, retired as a cook seven years ago but every week, at least once a week, he cooks up a feast for fellow council flat residents.
To attract everyone's attention, once Johnson finishes cooking, he bangs on his pot or pan and sings out "bring yourplates, bring your bowls" and they all flock to his doorway.
He's a fan of making pasta dishes, vegetable bakes and rolls and he quite enjoys making the likes of apple crumbles or the occasional pear cake.
"My style of cooking is to chuck in a bit of this, chuck in a bit of that and it comes out alright.
Johnson worked as a cook for 40-plus years and his cooking took him as far as Australia.
"I did my apprenticeship as a pastry cook in Masterton. I went to Australia and worked at The Australian Club under a Polish cook."
He self-deprecatingly describes himself as a "basic cook" but worked at the Grand Hotel in Wellington for five years, at Newman College-University of Melbourne where he fed 220 university students and most recently as a cook at Mary Doyle Retirement Village, Wellington among other kitchens.
But it was his time as a cook at a Mary Doyle retirement home which he enjoyed the most, before retiring at 68.
"I was working at Mary Doyle in Wellington. I loved working in the retirement home, as you get older you look after each other."
Johnson had a quadruple heart bypass which was the deciding factor behind his retirement but that didn't stop him from cooking.
"I am very involved with everyone around me [at the council flats], I cook for them sometimes once, sometimes twice a week."
Most of what he cooks comes out of his own pocket with the occasional box of food from Nourish for Nil, but he loves doing it.