Christopher Richard Stein, CBE (born 4 January 1947) is an English celebrity chef, restaurateur, writer and television presenter. Along with business partner (and first wife)
Jill Stein, he runs the Stein hotel and restaurant business in the UK. The business has a number of renowned restaurants, shops and hotels in
Padstow along with other restaurants in
Marlborough,
Winchester and
Barnes. He is also the head chef and a co-owner of the "Rick Stein at Bannisters" restaurants in
Mollymook and
Port Stephens in
Australia, with his second wife, Sarah.[1] He writes cookery books and has presented numerous cookery series for the BBC.
Early years
Of German descent, Christopher Richard Stein was born on 4 January 1947[2] in
Churchill, Oxfordshire, to Eric Stein (1908-1965) and Dorothy Gertrude née Jackson (1909-1999).[3] He was born and brought up on a farm.[4][5][6]
Stein was educated at Wells Court, a preparatory school just outside
Tewkesbury,[7] then Wells House, the Court's bigger sister-school at
Malvern Wells, and then
Uppingham School. He took
A-levels in English, history and geography, but failed all of them. He moved to a
cram school in
Brighton, gaining E grades in English and history.[8]
Being on his own, he read widely, reflected on his attitude to education, and applied successfully to
New College, Oxford, where he earned an English degree in 1971. Shortly after that, he moved to
Padstow.[11]
Career
After graduating, Stein converted a
mobile disco in Padstow, which he had run as a student, into a quayside nightclub with his friend, Johnny. It became known for its freeze-dried curries. However, the nightclub lost its licence and was closed down by the police, mainly due to frequent brawls with local fishermen. The pair still had a licence for a restaurant in another part of the building, so they continued with that to avoid bankruptcy.[10][11] Stein ran the kitchen using the experience he had gained as a
commis chef. Eventually he converted it into a small harbour-side bistro, The Seafood Restaurant, with his first wife Jill in 1975.[12] As of 2015[update],[needs update] his business operates four restaurants, a bistro, a café, a seafood
delicatessen, a
pâtisserie shop, a gift shop and a cookery school.[13]
In 2007, threats against Stein's businesses were made by
Cornish nationalists.[14] His impact on the economy of Padstow is such that it has been nicknamed "Padstein".[15] In 2009, Stein made his first acquisition in the nearby village of
St Merryn, 3½ miles from Padstow, taking over the Cornish Arms public house on the village's outskirts, intending to keep it as a traditional Cornish pub.[16]
In October 2009, Stein and his future second wife (fiancée at the time), the publicist Sarah Burns, opened Rick Stein at Bannisters in
Mollymook, Australia. Stein said at the time of opening, "Ever since a memorable weekend eating
Pambula oysters and flathead in
Merimbula in the sixties, I've had the image of the clean blue sea and sweet seafood of the South Coast fixed in my head so when I was introduced to Mollymook about six years ago I knew that one day I would open up a restaurant celebrating local fish and shellfish but keeping it really simple."[1]
In 2018, Stein opened a second Rick Stein at Bannisters in
Salamander Bay in
Port Stephens, with his second wife, Sarah. Stein has become a popular television presenter on food programmes. After appearing once as a guest chef in
Keith Floyd's 1985 series Floyd on Fish and in his 1986 series Floyd on Food, he was offered the chance to present his own series – like the "travelogue" style of cookery show pioneered by Floyd – on
BBC television, using Floyd's producer and director David Pritchard.[citation needed] This caused a feud, only resolved shortly before Floyd's death.[citation needed]
His shows have included Rick Stein's Taste of the Sea, Fruits of the Sea, Seafood Odyssey, Fresh Food, Seafood Lovers' Guide, Food Heroes, French Odyssey, Mediterranean Escapes, Far Eastern Odyssey, Rick Stein's Spain and Rick Stein's India. In the last five series,[when?] he set out in search of the best in the region's foods.[17]
A book has accompanied each series, and Stein's book English Seafood Cookery won the
Glenfiddich Award for Food Book of the Year in 1989. Stein was awarded the
OBE in the
2003 New Year Honours for services to tourism in Cornwall[20] and the
CBE in the
2018 New Year Honours for services to the economy.[21]
On 22 June 2020, it was confirmed that Stein's restaurant in
Porthleven,
Cornwall would close permanently due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. The restaurant had been closed since March 2020.[22] In July 2020, it was announced that chef
Michael Caines would take over the restaurant.[23]
Stein met his first wife Jill Newstead[27] in
Padstow. They married in 1975, both aged 28, and set up their restaurant and hotel business. Stein has three sons with Jill: Edward, Jack, and Charles who are involved in the family business.[28][29]
Stein met Sarah Burns, 20 years his junior, in Australia in 1997, when he was 50. She was also married, and working as a publicity manager for Australia Gourmet Traveller magazine.[30][31] Stein and Burns had a secret five-year affair before Jill found out in 2002.[32] She and Stein separated in 2002 and divorced in 2007,[33] but agreed to continue to run the business together.[34] Burns divorced in 2003, and she and Stein married on 7 October 2011.[30][31]
Stein has a brother,
John, and a sister, Henrietta.[35] He also has a half-brother, Jeremy, his mother's son from her first marriage.[35] He is the uncle of DJ and music producer
Judge Jules,[36] and the artist Lucy Stein.
In 2022, Stein underwent
open heart surgery at the
Royal Brompton Hospital to repair a defective heart valve.[37] Appearing live on
BBC's,
The One Show in October 2023, promoting his book, "Simple Suppers", he shared that his heart surgery experience had inspired his back to basics recipes but he inadvertently used a swear word and the show's host and Stein had to apologise for the error.[38]
Rick Stein's Seafood, 2001 - Gourmand World Cookbook Awards, 2001 – winner of category: Best Seafood and Fish in English; Best in the World Fish and Seafood (German translation – Gold medal – Gastronomische Akademie Deutschland 2003)
My Favourite Seafood Recipes, 2002 (Marks and Spencer cookery book)
Rick Stein's Food Heroes, 2002 – Gourmand World Cookbook Awards 2002 – winner of category: Best Local Cookery Book; Best Cookery Book of the Year in Great Britain / Jacob's Creek World Food Media Awards 2003: Silver for best hardcover recipe book
Rick Stein's Guide to the Food Heroes of Britain (
ISBN0-563-52175-9), 2003 – Gourmand World Cookbook Awards 2003 – winner of category: Best Guide
Rick Stein's Food Heroes, Another Helping (
ISBN0-56348-752-6), 2004
Rick Stein's Complete Seafood (
ISBN1-58008-568-7) – winner of the James Beard Foundation Award 2005 for Cook Book of the Year
Rick Stein’s Food Stories, BBC Two, February 2024. 15 Episodes[60]
DVD / VHS
Rick Stein Cooks Fish (1997 VHS, re-issued as a bonus on Seafood Odyssey DVD)
Rick Stein's Taste of the Sea (1999 VHS release of 1995 broadcast)
Rick Stein's Seafood Odyssey (1999 VHS & 2005 DVD)
Rick Stein's Seafood Lovers Guide (2001 VHS)
Rick Stein's Food Heroes (2003 VHS & 2005 DVD. DVD release also includes the six episodes of Rick Stein's Food Heroes, Another Helping, Series 1.)
Rick Stein's French Odyssey (2007 DVD)
Rick Stein's Mediterranean Escapes (2009 DVD)
Rick Stein's Far Eastern Odyssey (2010 DVD)
Rick Stein's Spain (2011 DVD)
Rick Stein's India (2013 DVD)
Rick Stein's Venice To Istanbul (2015 DVD)
Rick Stein's Tastes of the World: From Cornwall to Shanghai (2016 DVD - a compilation of six individual broadcasts: Rick Stein's Taste of Shanghai, Rick Stein's German Odyssey, Rick Stein & The Japanese Ambassador Rick Stein Tastes the Blues, Rick Stein's Taste of the Italian Opera, Rick Stein's Cornish Christmas)
5 July 2016, Rick and Jill Stein received the Special Award at the prestigious Catey Awards, for their more than 41 years of outstanding contribution to the hospitality industry.[65]
CBE – 2018 New Year Honours: For services to the economy[66]
References
^
ab"Rick Stein at Bannisters". Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 28 July 2016.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (
link)
^"Rick Stein". dunedinlibraries.govt.nz. Archived from
the original on 25 July 2017. Retrieved 4 January 2017.