Archive FM

The Go To Food Podcast

Chef Jake Finn - Walking Out On The Biggest Bully In The Industry, Chucking Out Racist Customers & Creating One Of London's Greatest Neighbourhood Spots!

Welcome back to Mise en Place where this week we sit down with Jake Finn, the chef-owner behind Cinder – the neighbourhood restaurant where everything hits the charcoal. Jake shares his journey from being one of the first Ritz apprentices in 2006 to opening Cinder in the middle of a pandemic, and building it into a two-location favourite for fire-cooked, produce-led food.


We talk about his formative years under the notoriously exacting Raphael Duntoye at Le Petit Maison, then going onto Coya where there was one night he ruined £2,500 of Waygu Beef for one table, and the leap into running his own place. Jake gets candid about the tough moments – walking out of a toxic kitchen, delivering meals to 50 homes a night during lockdown, chucking out guests for being racist to his staff and the struggle to stay afloat in this market– as well as the highs, like when Pierre Koffmann walked into his restaurant, and how he became a regular.


Expect stories about burnt sausages, burnt leeks, and everything in between, as we explore Jake’s Mediterranean-inspired cooking style, signature dishes like cedar plank salmon, and why he believes the best food is always the simplest. Oh, and he’s not holding back on his thoughts about smash burgers either.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Broadcast on:
17 Apr 2025

Welcome back to Mise en Place where this week we sit down with Jake Finn, the chef-owner behind Cinder – the neighbourhood restaurant where everything hits the charcoal. Jake shares his journey from being one of the first Ritz apprentices in 2006 to opening Cinder in the middle of a pandemic, and building it into a two-location favourite for fire-cooked, produce-led food.


We talk about his formative years under the notoriously exacting Raphael Duntoye at Le Petit Maison, then going onto Coya where there was one night he ruined £2,500 of Waygu Beef for one table, and the leap into running his own place. Jake gets candid about the tough moments – walking out of a toxic kitchen, delivering meals to 50 homes a night during lockdown, chucking out guests for being racist to his staff and the struggle to stay afloat in this market– as well as the highs, like when Pierre Koffmann walked into his restaurant, and how he became a regular.


Expect stories about burnt sausages, burnt leeks, and everything in between, as we explore Jake’s Mediterranean-inspired cooking style, signature dishes like cedar plank salmon, and why he believes the best food is always the simplest. Oh, and he’s not holding back on his thoughts about smash burgers either.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.