We do need some fire control

Whether you are a BBQ beginner, enthusiast or a chef looking to up your outdoor game, there is a school out there for you. CHARLOTTE MACKANESS goes looking for live-fire cooking

Interest in open-fire cooking has fuelled not just a surge in courses covering a juicy array of subjects – from barbecue basics to niche firemaster skills – but also a fantastic choice of venues, many in breathtaking locations and in the company of some of the hottest names in outdoor cooking.

The make-up of those attending barbecuing courses is as varied as the techniques being taught and the equipment available to learn with. 

“We have everyone from professionals wanting to broaden their skills set and passionate fire enthusiasts to a surprising number of guests who don’t even own a barbecue,” reveals Joe Nesbitt-Larking, who runs courses alongside Andrew Dickens at Riverside Garden Centre in Hertford and its purpose-built barbecue school.

“The best barbecuing kit can be a considerable outlay, so it makes sense for people to do their research and find out what they enjoy cooking on first,” says Nesbitt-Larking, a food writer and musician, with an infectious enthusiasm for the very best ingredients, prepared in the open and shared with friends.

“Cooking with fire can sometimes feel a bit mysterious so we are very much about empowering people to help them make decisions. It varies from person to person but what is at the core is learning to control the heat and having a barbecue that works for the individual. We have space for up to 30 on our courses. Andrew and I have a station in the centre and we very much ‘cook in the round’ with guest stations dotted around us, each with a gas and charcoal barbecue and then something else – be that a pellet grill or electric barbecue,” he explains.

Sessions, which are held in an attractive wooden outbuilding constructed by Riverside employees, are typically four hours long, although specialist days, such as the seven-hour low and slow smoking course, are also on offer. According to Nesbitt-Larkin, the courses are “fairly meat centric” and he says there is a balance to be struck between what people want but also opening minds to the possibilities.

“Vegetables love a live fire, and it is no coincidence that so many restaurants are now offering charred veg on their menus,” he says “We teach a miso-glazed hispi cabbage that never fails to amaze; even those who claim not to like cabbage are turned around by it. I’d say that barbecue cuisine is still very American-centric, and we’re all about exploring what else is out there. After all, pre-electricity, every culture in the world cooked on fire.

“For us, it’s all about doing simple things very well, with confidence and making the most of what you have around you,” says Nesbitt-Larking. “In Britain, we are blessed with the most beautiful natural larder so there’s no need to encourage people to lather their food in barbecue sauce or a very sugary rub, for instance.”

When it comes to making the most of delicious local ingredients, the Food Hub Cookery School on the Kenton Hall Estate in Suffolk has got reducing food miles down to a fine art. It is based, along with a butchery, at the heart of a 450-acre mixed farm belonging to and run by the family of Emily McVeigh. Enjoying pride of place on the barbecue school menu is beef from the farm’s Longhorn cattle.

“You wouldn’t believe how a slow-cooked brisket can really blow people’s mind. It has the most amazing smoke ring and we slice it rather than shredding it,” says McVeigh. 

While the location of the cookery school – in a old cow byre surrounded by glorious Suffolk countryside – may ooze rustic charm, the set up is state of the art. Last year, the indoor facilities had a Miele refurbishment, while the outdoor kitchen (that McVeigh describes as “an incredibly cool but, crucially, weather-proofed space”) has been a Weber Academy since 2016.

The Food Hub can accommodate up to 16 – set up on barbecues with a range of fuels from charcoal to gas, pellets and smokers – although 12 is the usual number. “Our courses are incredibly interactive but, above all, really fun,” says McVeigh, who claims there is a 50-50 split between uber passionate foodies and those coming for “an experience.”

In the decade Kenton Hall has hosted barbecue courses, McVeigh has noticed a change in demographic. “There are many more women than when we started,” she reveals. “It’s still probably 60% men but barbecuing is becoming increasingly female, plus we have a lot of couples who come along to the courses together.”

What they learn is everything from food safety to smoking, grilling and baking. “I hope people take away confidence and how to get the most out of their barbecue,” she says. “There is so much more to it than burnt bangers; once you get going you can do everything from wok-cooked mussels to pineapple upside-down cake.”

McVeigh concedes that open-fire cooking can be challenging. “There are so many variables and it takes practice. It really helps when people understand what they can control, such as the fuel and using a meat probe to remove guesswork. Our beginner courses go through the basics of direct and indirect cooking, getting the fuel right and how to use a chimney. At the end we have a huge feast but there are plenty of tastings throughout the whole course,” she beams.

While Kenton Hall exudes rural homeliness, the cookery school at Northcote – a luxury hotel in Lancashire’s Ribble Valley – has a very different USP. Just a glass door separates the cookery school from the kitchen of the Michelin-starred restaurant. 

“I think what makes our courses unique is that we use all the same ingredients and suppliers, and when we do tastings the tables are laid to the same standards you’d see in a Michelin-starred restaurant and 

all the courses are wine matched. It is a really special experience,” says head tutor Richard Ogden. 

Ogden may have only been at Northcote just over a year but both he and the school have a fine barbecue pedigree. Northcote is no newbie when it comes to running courses – managing director Craig Bancroft is “a huge barbecue fan” – while Ogden has been teaching open-fire skills for many years. “Barbecue is a very broad umbrella but it is one that I’m incredibly committed to, and I want to work hard with other chefs and schools to push the genre,” he says. Among the big-names Ogden collaborates with is Lisa Goodwin-Allen, the well-known chef who heads Northcote’s kitchen. While Goodwin-Allen doesn’t teach in the cookery school, she helps devise the menus in tandem with the tutors.

“I think barbecuing can have a bit of a macho stigma attached,” concedes Ogden. “However, for me, it is all about family and getting people together with friends and family, which is why we always teach our two-ingredient flatbread recipe; it’s a fun job for kids to do in order to get them involved with the whole process.”

Those attending Northcote courses – no more than eight, with four or fewer pupils per tutor – learn everything from equipment and fuels to balancing a menu in terms of proteins and cooking times and, whatever the fuel, the golden rule of managing heat.

“We really try to imbue the importance of cooking from the insides out, so you’ll see lots of meat probes about. It is very much the antithesis of a burnt sausage or chicken drumstick with raw insides.

“I always tell people that anything you can cook in an oven, you can cook using a barbecue – with the right knowledge. I am sure our guests leave enthused and with real confidence,” believes Ogden. “We involve our guests with absolutely everything from start to finish – there are no Blue Peter moments!”


The Food Hub Cookery School at Kenton Hall

Courses range from two-hour masterclasses to full-day courses – priced from £55 to £110 per person. Choose from general ‘smoke’ introductions to specialist days, including middle-eastern cuisine and perfect steaks.

Food Hub Suffolk

Northcote Cookery School

Northcote’s intimate ‘The Art of Fire’ courses are £270 per person but sell-out fast so early booking is essential. Look out for guest chef workshops coming up, including a £300 masterclass with Chris Taylor, otherwise known as T-Bone Chops.

Northcote

Riverside Barbecue School

This Hertford garden centre hosts several courses a year. It’s most popular is the four-hour ‘hands on BBQ Masterclass’ (£125). It also offers specialist ‘live fire’ courses and a seven-hour ‘low, slow & smoking course’ (£185) as well as free demonstrations on various barbecues.

Visit Website

Butchers Yard

Leading live-fire cook Phil Roberts and Northampton Saints rugby player and pizza connoisseur Ethan Waller are behind this exciting new Staffordshire cooking school. Based at Aston’s of Coven butchers near Wolverhampton, Butchers Yard champions local produce and has three tiers of class – Firestarter, Grillseeker and Flametamer.

Butchers Yard

Gardenbox

Sessions have proved a big hit since Gardenbox opened its cookery school just outside its Manchester shop earlier this 

year. There’s a wide selection of courses to choose from including those tailored to particular equipment, such as ‘Kamado 

Joe Confidence’. It is also introducing women-only courses and special wine-pairing sessions. Courses range from £100 to £130.

Gardenbox

BBQ land School

This Hitchin mecca hosts about three classes a month after constructing a teaching barn last year. Courses, in partnership with Jack Rowbottom of Jack’s Meat Shack, include everything from Kamado basics to learning how to barbecue your Christmas dinner. Sessions are £60 for two hours, refunded if you buy a grill on the day.

BBQ Land School

Cambridge Home & Garden

Cambridge BBQ School is one of the new kids on the block and currently offers a course a month with more in the pipeline. These range in price from £50 to £125, with hands-on learning on topics from butchery and baking to pizza and live-fire cooking. The school has partnered with Traeger.

Cambridge Home & Garden

Heart Smoke & Soal

Another outdoor living showroom that has branched into teaching barbecue cooking skills following demand from customers. “Whatever the course, we have one goal: to help you become a more confident, more intuitive alfresco cook,” says Zowie Rees from the Devon-based outfit. Sessions range from £120 to £145 and cover general skills to specialist courses including salt block and plank cooking, Indian recipes and wood-pellet masterclasses.

Heart Smoke &Soal

Gates Garden Centre

This vast garden centre on the Rutland/Leicestershire border, just outside Oakham, is home to an official Weber World Store and hosts three-hour courses under the expert eye of Tarrant Ablett. The sessions (£65 per person) promise to take barbecue skills to ‘haute cuisine level’ for anyone using a charcoal, gas, electric or wood-pellet set up.

Gates Garden Centre

High Grange Fire School

If enjoying your food with a view of rolling hills is your thing, High Grange in east Devon is 

the place for you. Chef and food writer Luke Vandore-Mackay runs full- and half-day courses with his wife, Sara. Spend an entire day (£225), and you’ll learn everything from pizzas to cooking with an OFYR fire pit, Braai master and a selection of other barbecues. Half-day fire schools (£130) either cover the basics in an introduction to fire cookery or tackle specific skills, such as the popular ‘Perfect Steak’ course.

High Grange Devon

Season Cookery School

Learn wood-fired cooking at Lainston House, near Winchester, from a host of Michelin-starred and award-winning chefs in Hampshire. Barbecue courses are £195 per person and include ‘Posh BBQ’, ‘Surf and Turf’ and ‘The Perfect Steak’.

Season Cookery School

The Salt Box

Courses at this delightful woodland cookery school in Surrey are all inspired by seasonal, wild and local ingredients. As well as general and more advanced cooking over fire-full days, specialist days include fish, venison and vegetables.

The Salt Box


The Smokin’ Elk

Elky Whittaker’s Smokin’ Elk school is based just outside Portsmouth and runs courses to suit all experience levels on both kettle-style barbecues and Kamados, with classes ranging in price from £130 to £165. You can also learn with host chefs including the likes of Sam Evans, Josh Katz and The Curry Guy. Elky’s beer fridge is popular too.

The Smokin’ Elk


UK BBQ School

Barbecue and wood-fired-oven classes from beginner to advanced aimed at giving people both confidence and the inspiration to cook outdoors. The school is run by Marcus Bawdon, teaching at his purpose-built school in beautiful mid Devon.

UK BBQ School

Swinton Cookery School

A barbecue school with a view. The 20,000-acre Swinton Estate borders the Yorkshire Dales National Park and falls within an area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Its cookery school is run out of a converted Georgian stable wing. 

Swinton Cookery School

Hunter Gather Cook

Opening eyes to nature’s larder is at the heart of Hunter Gather Cook, led by Nick Weston, which hosts its courses in a delightful shepherd’s barn on the Firle estate in East Sussex. Seasonality and the joys of foraging form a large part of courses (all £180), in addition to butchery, cooking over flame, grilling, underground ovens and hot and cold smoking. Also, don’t miss its guest chef series featuring the likes of Māori Mat Blak.

Hunter Gather Cook

Temper

Butchery and barbecue masterclasses (£150 per person) are offshoots of 

this chain of London smokehouse restaurants with open fire pits. Courses are monthly and include a three-course lunch with wine and a margarita.

Temper

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