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Learning how to make the most of the myriad fruits of the sea


Ruth Campbell learns how to catch, prepare and cook fresh fish in Staithes.

Learning how to make the most of the myriad fruits of the sea WE ARE sailing out of the harbour, sun glistening on the water as we look back on the pretty, cobbled fishing village of Staithes, with its colourful, brightly-painted, red pantiletopped cottages.

Seagulls are soaring overhead.

“It’s gorgeous”, I say, momentarily caught up in the romance of it all.

It doesn’t last long. “I wish people would stop painting their houses in those daft colours. They look ridiculous”, barks our skipper, local fisherman Sean Baxter. Local restaurant owner Brian Kay shakes his head at the seagulls as they squawk overhead.

“Can’t stand them. They’re pests”, he says.

My illusions may have been shattered, but I am soon to discover that the gritty reality of life in this fishing port – one of the top ten lobster fishing spots in the country – is actually far more romantic, wild and powerful than the superficial picture postcard view most tourists glimpse on a brief visit.

We are heading out to sea to catch fish for our supper on a Catch and Cook course run by Mr Kay and his partner, Charlotte Willoughby. The idea is that we will hook a few dozen pollack, cod, mackerel, maybe even ling, and then head back to their Endeavour restaurant, in the heart of the village, to learn how to fillet and skin, bone, smoke, salt and brine our haul.

From the North Sea to our plate in the space of a few hours – you can’t get much fresher than that. Catch and Cook is such a simple, but ultimately brilliant, idea that it’s hard to believe no-one has ever done it before.

But this is the first course of its kind in the North.

Mr Baxter, who has been fishing here since he was a boy, is passionate about this rugged coastline, pointing out lines of jet in the cliffs and telling us about the fascinating geology and mining history of the area. He shows us photographs of whales just a few miles out. “There are lots in August”, he says.

Judging by the abundance of fish and increasing number of species he encounters here, he reckons the North Sea has never been so healthy.

At the turn of the century, there were 80 full-time fishing boats putting out from Staithes, then one of the largest fishing ports on the North Sea. Now, there is only one, with a few small boats tending to lobster pots or, like Mr Baxter, taking people day fishing.

As 20mph winds lash our boat, it’s too rough to head out to Mr Baxter’s prime fishing spot, over one of the numerous fish-filled wrecks which litter this coastline. Recent storms, which have churned up the sea bed, mean it’s not the best day for fishing close to shore either, but we give it a go.

In the interests of sustainable fishing, Mr Kay insists on using only rod and line.

Everything he catches, he uses. It was the number of people he met who threw their catches away because they didn’t know what to do with them that inspired him to set up the course. “It’s such a terrible waste. We hope to help people get back in touch with their food, to show where it comes from and how they can best use it.”

Apart from one small coley, we don’t catch anything. But it doesn’t matter. It gives us the chance to visit fish wholesaler Matthew Asquith at the top of the village.

Mr Asquith shows us an impressive array of halibut, turbot, squid, haddock, pollack and red mullet, pointing to the shining eyes and bright pink gills which indicate a good, fresh fish.

Back at the 200-year-old Endeavour restaurant, where we are staying in a charming attic room with rooftop views over the harbour, we get to work. Mr Kay, a former award-winning TV producer, and his partner, a psychotherapist, had no experience of catering when they took on the restaurant.

It was over a few plates of oysters and bottles of wine in an oyster bar in New York eight years ago that they decided to take the plunge.

Many of their family and friends thought they were mad. But, after just 18 months, they were receiving rave reviews in the national press and could barely cope with the demand for bookings.

A number of national awards, including being named one of the top three places for seafood in the UK by The Sunday Times, are testimony to their extraordinary success.

As enthusiastic amateurs, they had to learn fast and on the job. When they made the bold decision to shrink the restaurant to one small, intimate dining room with just 16 covers, one regular customer, playwright Sir Alan Ayckbourn, said it was the first business he encountered which downsized rather than expanded when it hit success.

But they are always fully booked and in total control of their food, and that is how they want it.

I pick up lots of tips, such as coating my fingers and the fish with salt to keep it steady on the board while I wield the sharp filleting knife. And I discover that fish isn’t always best just fresh. Some, such as cod, is best left a few days in the fridge.

I enjoy gutting, cleaning and cutting up the exotic-looking local squid, and we learn the secret of opening oysters – wrap them in a wet tea towel before pushing and twisting the oyster knife in just the right spot.

From turbot and crab to shark, wolf fish, lobster and monkfish, the pair make the most of the astonishing diversity on their doorstep and have served more than 35 species of local fish over the years.

I might be tempted to compare what Mr Kay is doing for Staithes with what Rick Stein did for Padstow, but when he was asked to do some television work recently, he sent the crew to another chef in Whitby. “I’m just not interested”, he says, much too busy simply cooking good fish well.

Two-day residential Catch and Cook courses cost between £605 and £620 per couple, including boat fees, two days’ tuition, three nights’ accommodation, breakfasts, and a threecourse dinner each evening.

For details, visit endeavour restaurant.co.uk.


SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS: the Endeavour restaurant, Staithes SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS: the Endeavour restaurant, Staithes

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