Monday, August 31, 2009

NAKED CHEF COOKS UP RESTAURANTS FOR ASIA

       Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver is planning to launch 30 Italian family-style restaurants in Asia, with the first one set to open its doors to his gastronomic followers in Hong Kong early next year.
       The move marks the first step in taking his chain Jamie's Italian - which now has five eateries in England - outside his homeland, to a region which takes price in its rich diversity of international cuisine and where the economy is picking up faster than anywhere the economy is picking up faster than anywhere else in the world.
       "Why Asia? Of all the markets, it has by far the fastest-growing economy," said Edward Pinshow, president of Tranic Franchising, which has joined with Jamie's Italian International for the Asia expansion.
       "The Chinese have become extremely fond of Italian food. In Japan, Jamie's become a household name," he said on Tuesday.
       Pinshow added that the first stage of the expansion was to open six restaurants in Hong Kong and Singapore, for which he is now raising about US$200 million (Bt6.8 billion).
       They plan to roll out another 24 eateries in other parts of the region over the next five years, with China, Japan, Taiwan and South Korea among the most likely candidates for location.
       Pinshow said they are now working hard to get their first restaurant - a 460-square-metre, 180-seat venue in Hong Kong - ready for opening in the second quarter of next year.
       He said the menu would offer a full-course meal with antipasti, main dish, dessert, plus a glass of Italian wine, for an avarage of 300 Hong Kong dollars (about Bt1,300) per head.
       "At Jamie's restaurants, you will often find a blue-collar worker, a student, and the chairman of a blue-chip company side by side having a meal," he said, while stressing that everything they served would be "natural and organic".
       Hong Kong will also be established as the development hub, providing all regional support in licensing, real estate, training and logistics for the project.
       Meanwhile, Pinshow said Oliver also had his eyes set on Europe for his chain's international expansion.
       Oliver, 34, shot to fame in 1999 with his cooking series "The Naked Chef". He has since featured in numerous television series, and sold millions of copies of his cookbooks worldwide.
       His 2005 television documentary "Jamie's School Dinners" sparked a national debate on nutritional issues in Britain, and is credited with changing many people's eating habits.

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