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Food

Meet the London lawyer serving up gourmet kosher from his garden

Andrew Krausz's £180 a head experience is creating a splash in Hendon

May 11, 2023 09:59
PHOTO-2023-05-02-20-52-21
4 min read

Andrew Krausz is an unlikely restaurateur. Aviation partner at law firm Weightmans by day and by night (once a month) a self-taught chef taking kosher gourmets on a most unlikely journey.

In the garden behind his detached suburban home in Hendon, the founder of Blue Smoke cooks seven-course gourmet pop-up dinners (under SKA licence) for a crowd of 20 diners, each paying £180 (plus drinks) for the experience. Yes, you read that correctly — £180 per head, for dinner. In a back garden in NW4. But bear with me — he’s worth it.

The entrance has the feel of a speakeasy — guests are buzzed in down a side alley via a heavy black metal gate. Your senses are immediately assailed by a 20-foot bright yellow aircraft fuselage. A souvenir from the end of a litigation.

At the foot of a landscaped path sits The Fire Place — a single-storey brick building, with bi-fold doors onto a terrace. Two potted olive trees stand, sentry-like, at either end. Atop the building is a beehive and beyond, a small vegetable garden and our host’s flock of (very vocal) ducks, geese and hens.

Krausz describes his garden restaurant as “a passion project gone rogue”. The building replaced a summerhouse built over a Second World War bomb shelter. “The structure wasn’t safe, after a neighbour’s tree fell on it, so it all had to go.”

He has micro-managed the project with obsessive attention to detail. One minute you’re in suburban Hendon, the next you’re inside a pop-up restaurant with design details in keeping with a five-star country house hotel.

“I think many food projects are one-dimensional, maybe two- dimensional,” Krausz says. “But if you really want to capture people you should really tickle all their senses. Sight, smell, feel, ambience, and sound — they should all come together in harmony and then you can elevate people.”

Every part of the building — from the 20,000 reclaimed imperial bricks, picked for their history, colour and quality, to the Belgian blue limestone floor tiles (filled with tiny fossils) and European oak beams —has been designed with precision.