Official visitor guide produced in association with the
Visit Chester & Cheshire regional tourist board.
Sunday, 5th February 2012
Leigh Myers started cooking at the age of seven but it was when he was offered an apprenticeship at Paul Heathcote's School of Excellence, now in Manchester, at the age of 15 that he decided to go for a career as a chef.After graduating from Heathcote's, he worked at Chez Nico restaurant in London for a few months. The capital's pace was dramatically different to what he was used to, and, deciding the aggression and discipline of a West End kitchen was not for him, he returned to the Heathcote family to work in the brassiere in Preston (now Simply Heathcotes) as chef de partie, larder and meat.
Within a year, though, he moved to the Michelin-starred Northcote Manor under Steve Williams and Nigel Haworth, where he made it to sous chef and in 2001 he returned for another spell at the Simply Heathcotes Preston restaurant, this time as head chef.
For his next job, the owners of the Park hotel in Preston wanted him to create a well respected eaterie from scratch. Within two weeks of opening - and with Myers doing his fair share of washing-up - the restaurant was awarded two AA rosettes.
In 2003, Paul Heathcote asked his former trainee to become head chef at his flagship Michelin-starred Longridge restaurant - an offer too good to refuse.
"It was the first proper kitchen I had stepped into when I first started, so it was amazing going back there as head chef," Myers says.
While there, he won a Caterer Acorn award in recognition of his talent. "It's the one that your peers and employees recommend you for, so it's special," he says. Myers gained a Michelin star, three AA rosettes and an Egon Ronay accolade during his 18 months back at Longridge, before decamping to the Wordsworth hotel in Grasmere, Cumbria, in the summer of 2005.
Now executive chef at the Grosvenor Pulford hotel in Chester, the 27-year-old has ambitions to one day run his own business..