The girl at the reception desk at the new Buca di Beppo restaurant in Elstree's Village Hotel has never heard of Robert Earl. Fortunately, one of the PRs fluttering about overhears and rushes over.
Robert Earl himself might well have been unimpressed. He is, as you will most likely already be aware, a hospitality entrepreneur of gargantuan proportions. Not physically. The 60-year-old clad in jeans, shirt and smart black soft leather coat, clearly does not overindulge when visiting his thousands of restaurant outlets, across the US and around the world. He cannot afford to. "I don't exercise," he confides, adding "I have time only for work and family."
Tonight he is returning to his north-west London roots with Tricia, his wife of 28 years. The ex-Hendon boy is about to entertain the press and a group of his friends (more on them later) at the fifth of his Buca di Beppo chain to open in the UK.
Buca di Beppo is an Italian-styled family eatery - all dark wood, Italian memorabilia, garlic bread and huge bowls of pasta - of which there are already 88 in the United States. Large tables have lazy susan centres - à la a Chinese restaurant - and everyone gets a spin of the wheel to dig into dishes like baked ravioli, apple and gorgonzola salad, colossal brownie sundaes. Earl is in high spirits, delighted to be opening a restaurant in the Jewish heartland, as he believes "this is just the sort of food that Jewish people love".