23 May 2013
No Better Job – Chef Interview - Superyacht Ulysses

“There is no better job in the world than being a chef on a superyacht – everyone loves food.” Meet Shane, a Kiwi chef, who qualified 22 years ago at the Auckland Chef and Hotel Training School and is now head chef onboard the 65 metre M/Y Ulysses superyacht, one of the long-anticipated motor yachts on show at the Genoa Charter Show 2013. We were invited onboard by Gorm the captain to ask Shane a few questions about his experiences, his work, and what he liked cooking.
Shane’s History
Shane started out cooking in restaurants like a usual chef trainee. Initially he worked as a chef in a restaurant on the Costa del Sol in Marbella called Montigues, about 12,000 miles from his home town in Rotorua. He then moved onto The Hague as sous chef in a Michelin star restaurant run by Paul Van Waarden where he really got a taste for fine dining. One day “a few mates in France called up saying ‘mate get down here – people are paying for chefs to cook for them on their boats.’” And he’s been working on superyachts ever since. “I have been to every corner of the planet and met so many great people. It is an addiction.” On his first boat Shane circumnavigated the globe starting in southern Chile, then cruised through the pacific ring onto the Americas Cup, sailed through the 193km Suez Canal during the Gulf War, and then into the Med where you can find him today. “I have now clocked over 200,000 nautical miles on a boat which I suppose will take some beating” he beamed.
Best cooking experience on a superyacht?
“It would have to be cooking a spit roast on the beach. There are two occasions that spring to mind. The first, roasting a pig on a pink sand beach in Fakarava, an atoll in the west of the Tuamotu group in French Polynesia where again we were diving with the boss with thousands of sharks. Grey and lagoon white-tip sharks, tuna, scads and manta rays. The second was in Southern Turkey. The owner, a Mexican, loved his pork but being a Muslim country he respected the culture and so we had spit roast baby goat instead. It took me and the crew a while to set up and clear the beach but it’s all worth it when you see the guests having such a good time and they all wanted to have a go at turning the spit themselves.” “Pizza night on Ulysses – we get chopping boards for everyone with lots of ingredients. I make the dough and everyone rolls their pizza adds their ingredients and cooks their own. I ran the 1st wood burning pizza restaurant in NZ so pizzas are easy.”What is your style?
“I don’t really have a particular style. I love markets and fresh ingredients. I don’t really tie myself down and just let my ingredients govern what I cook. I want people to come onboard and feel at home so they let me know what they like and I go with that. I can do American, Mexican, Korean, Japanese, French, Italian – anything they want. I get lessons from some guests and I give cooking lessons to others. I do love a good BBQ, and we have one onboard MY Ulysses. I like getting the right cuts of meat. I suppose it is a “primal” way to eat. I also make my own pasta…..”Best Markets?
“Place de Spagna in Mallorca and the market in Las Ramblas in Barcelona are both unbelievable. The way they present the food is amazing. The market in Genoa is pretty good too. “So can you always get the right ingredients?
“Not always, sometimes it is very difficult. On my first boat in Chile I had to buy provisions for a 5 week crossing to Pitcairn Island. I hit the fish market in Valdivia and pretty much took everything. The market there was crazy, selling every kind of fish imaginable. The traders filleted the fish in front of my eyes and fed the heads to massive walruses sitting next to them on the dock. At the vegetable market there were pumpkins the size of couches where they
What do Billionaire Russians like to eat?
Lots of our clients are Russian or Russian speakers from Russia, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan. Most of them are oil people – you wouldn’t have heard of them. There has been a certain change of wanting healthy food, salads, grilled fish, and diet-friendly food – low-level carbs. Ulysses is a family boat and people tend to like family food onboard as they are often with their kids. Once a guest asked for 20 dishes to be brought to the table at once – it was really a show of prosperity; we had soups, chicken, salads, fish, steaks but all nice home cooked food. Usually the guests go off the yacht for fancy food. My boss today loves BBQ’s and we head to the sundeck and I just keep cooking and he keeps eating. When I arrived he said: ‘just do what you do, and I’ll let you know if I am not happy.’ It has never come to that.What does your day entail?
