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The Food Programme

The Vegetable Yoda: Charlie Hicks

The Food Programme

BBC

Food, Arts

4.4977 Ratings

🗓️ 11 February 2018

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sheila Dillon and Dan Saladino pay tribute to greengrocer extraordinaire, the late, great and encyclopaedic Charlie Hicks with help from Jamie Oliver, Gregg Wallace and Raymond Blanc.

Many radio listeners will remember Charlie Hicks as a co-presenter of BBC Radio 4's Veg Talk series, in which listeners phoned in to speak to two great experts of fresh produce. Charlie was a 4th generation, Covent Garden market fruit and veg man, but he was so much more including a great cook, a food scholar and broadcaster.

Charlie, along with Gregg, helped changed British food culture in the 1980s and 1990s. They supplied London's top chefs with fresh produce and helped introduce new flavours and varieties to British tables. Food fashions spread as chefs influenced supermarkets who then made relatively obscure ingredients such as rocket, artichoke and baby beets popular with domestic cooks.

The series Veg Talk, which ran from 1998 to 2005 attracted all of the UK's top named chefs including Jamie Oliver (who described Charlie as a "Vegetable Yoda" and "the Chef's Secret Weapon", Angela Hartnett, Michel Roux Jnr and Cyrus Todiwala. The programme gave Charlie a platform to share his knowledge and expertise of fruit and vegetables, as well as his sharp sense of humour and unique banter with his co-presenter Gregg.

Charlie Hicks passed away in January and all parts of the food industry mourned his loss.

Dan and Sheila tell his food story and explain why he made such an impact on British food culture.

Produced by Dan Saladino.

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're about to listen to a BBC podcast and I'd like to tell you a bit about the

0:03.8

podcast I work on. I'm Dan Clark and I commissioned factual podcasts at the BBC.

0:08.6

It's a massive area but I'd sum it up as stories to help us make sense of the forces shaping the world.

0:15.3

What podcasting does is give us the space and the time to take brilliant BBC journalism

0:19.8

and tell amazing compelling stories that really get behind the headlines.

0:23.7

And what I get really excited about is when we find a way of drawing you into a subject

0:28.4

you might not even have thought you were interested in.

0:30.2

Whether it's investigations, science, tech, politics, culture, true crime, the environment,

0:36.1

you can always discover more with a podcast on BBC Sounds.

0:40.0

This is the BBC.

0:43.9

Hello, you've downloaded a podcast of BBC Radio 4's The Food Program.

0:49.0

Welcome to our world, from cooking to culture,

0:52.3

politics to pleasure. We hope you enjoy it.

0:55.0

Hello, I'm Dan Saladino.

0:59.0

And I'm Sheila Dylan.

1:00.0

And we're both going to help tell this week's story.

1:03.0

Sheila, I need to take you to a very special location.

1:06.0

A place where there's food everywhere.

1:08.0

You can see it, smell it, hear it.

1:10.0

A market, perhaps?

1:12.0

And it's the early 1970s it is this is what I found in the BBC sound archive

1:17.5

Corvent Garden Market 1973 I mean this is before the food program got going and I love hearing this and around

...

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