Refurbishment and Restore Issue 15 2019 | Page 34

FORKING OUT ON A NEW KITCHEN BY DREW TERRY I’d spent a small fortune designing and installing my dream kitchen and couldn’t wait to throw my first get-together. But instead, a calamitous soiree with friends set me on a path to find the one thing missing from the perfect dinner party. I pictured my new kitchen being a room in which I’d spend countless hours preparing the food I adore for those I love. Creating wonders. Entertaining. Proudly serving up my finest endeavours, course-by-course, to hungry smiles waiting with anticipation. “I spent months pouring over magazines and designing the perfect kitchen.” I’d paid attention to every last detail; the finish, the floor, the lighting, the hinges and handles, right down the hue of the tile grout. So why did I stop when it came to the crucial job of delivering food from the plate to the palate? I hate to admit it, but I completely overlooked the importance of the one thing we all hold and interact with throughout the entire meal. Cutlery. On the night in question, my £39.99 home catalogue canteen became the centre of much mockery. One pal took up two spoons and began playing them on his knee, while another challenged everyone else to race across the living room while dangling them from their noses. After rinsing them off, I reset the table. After washing the ‘starter’ cutlery and resetting the table yet again for the main course, I could only cringe as I watched another friend hack through his steak with a regular table knife. Then out came a mishmash of spoons in different sizes so people could chase their dessert around the ill-chosen crockery. It was a disaster. So, I set off on a personal journey to find the perfect tools to grace my table. Cutlery that would look and feel the part, and would be as enjoyable to interact with as the food itself. Premium cutlery that wouldn’t break the bank. ‘Perhaps only the most discerning diners appreciate such things’ I thought to myself as I browsed the usual suspects online. The same designs; banal, mundane, void of any personality. A trip to the high street turned up even less. So I decided to look at who supplied my favourite restaurants. After all, if it’s good enough for Blumenthal… am I right? And what do you know? Many Michelin Starred restaurants today use cutlery created by one Great British designer. A name that came up again and again - but only in those cool, trendy circles made up those in-the-know. They spoke of a designer to the stars, whose sensual culinary forms are, and I quote “stunning in their simplicity”, that they can be found in permanent exhibitions at the Victoria & Albert Museum. WELCOME TO THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF WILLIAM WELCH It turns out that William Welch, Founder of Studio William Cutlery in Stratford- Upon-Avon, is unlike any other designer in this space. When I called in at his showroom in the Cotswolds he was more than happy to explain, “You’ll find with most designers that their product range is chosen by sales and marketing and approved by a board. As a designer, I retain full creative control over the brand, the design process and the products that make it to market.” The result is cutlery that is inspired and designed around the science of food and form. William adds, “Studio William is a design- led brand. Good design and good quality is what you buy. Every time.” “Perhaps only the most discerning diners appreciate such things.” Control Team here in the UK. As a result, their designs stand the test of time. Today, Studio William Cutlery can be found in some of the most prestigious and iconic venues in the world, from Number 10 Downing Street and the Sydney Opera House to the Mandarin Oriental, and Burj Al Arab, Dubai. And now… my kitchen! Studio William fork during production PERFECT CUTLERY WITH PERSONALITY In the end, I chose a design called KARRI, which stood out and captured my personality perfectly. Winner of the Red Dot Design Award and the Good Design Award from the Chicago Athenaeum Museum of Architecture and Design, KARRI breaks the rules of traditional cutlery design. With stylised, slender fork heads, a heavy gauge that screams 5-star hotel quality, sophisticated lines and a cheeky knife designed to stand up on the table, it demands attention … and it gets it. Last week, those same friends came over for dinner again, and I’m pleased to report, not a single spoon was played. BUT THIS ISN’T JUST CUTLERY William Welch – one of no more than five leading experts in his field worldwide, creates sensory shapes that tease and delight. So revered are these pronged pieces of perfection, that the most celebrated chefs rely on them to elevate their dishes to a whole new level. While a growing army of loyal customers frequently describe his creations as, “elegant and beautifully designed”. Forged from the highest quality materials, each piece of Studio William cutlery goes through approximately 45 processes and finishing techniques before being painstakingly inspected by a Quality