Yianni Papoutsis

Yianni Papoutsis
Born UK

Culinary career

Cooking style Street food / Fast food

Yianni Papoutsis (Greek: Γιάννη Παπουτσής) is the owner of the Meat chain of restaurants. He previously worked at the English National Ballet as a production technician. He started the business as a street food truck, and after teaming with Scott Collins and opening a pop-up restaurant, he now runs three restaurants across London.

Biography

Papoutsis was born in England,[1] and during his childhood, he split his time between there and the United Kingdom. As a teenager he moved to Denmark to find work.[2] Papoutsis worked for the English National Ballet for fifteen years as a production technician.[3] His first experience of cooking burgers for the public was as a volunteer at Burning Man.[4] In 2009, he opened a street food van serving gourmet hamburgers called MEATwagon as a hobby.[3][4] The first truck was vandalised and destroyed, and the second was stolen. This meant that Papoutsis was forced to cook outside on rented equipment in all weathers.[3]

He met Scott Collins in 2010 in a car park in Peckham, South London where the MEATwagon was running. Collins invited Papoutsis to pull up at one of his pubs,[4] and the two would eventually become business partners.[3] In 2011, they opened a pop-up restaurant, #MEATeasy above a pub in New Cross, London on 10 January after having conceived it with Collins on New Years Day.[3][4] It was only after opening this restaurant that he was able to leave his job at the English National Ballet.[3] He opened his first permanent location entitled MEATliquor near Oxford Street on 11 November 2011.[5] MEATmarket at Covent Garden,[3] and MEATmission in Hoxton shortly followed which was then followed by their radio station MEATtransMISSION.com. MEATliquor Brighton opened in September 2013.[4] and MEATliquor Leeds in September 2014.

Papoutsis has since been invited to speak on a committee about fast food start-up companies at Downing Street.[4] He has launched a cookbook with Collins in September 2014, co-written with DBC Pierre entitled The MEATliquor Chronicles.[6] Collins and Papoutsis' research trips to the United States for the cookbook were covered by GQ.[7] He has been described as "a pioneer of street food" by Bloomberg Businessweek.[8] He was named in the Evening Standard as one the 1000 Most Influential People in London in both 2012 & 2013

References

  1. Montgomery, Hugh (27 May 2012). "Yianni Papoutsis: 'A Las Vegas buffet is one of my favourite places to people-watch'". The Independent. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  2. Whittle, Natalie (18 November 2011). "FT Foodies: Yianni Papoutsis". Financial Times. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Morgan, Eleanor (15 July 2012). "How to make money from street food". The Observer. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Dean, Will (4 May 2013). "Bun fight: An eat-all-you-can tour of America with MEATliquor's Scott Collins and Yianni Papoutsis". The Independent. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  5. "Behind the scenes at Meat Liquor". Time Out. 10 November 2011. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  6. Stewart, Victoria (25 April 2013). "Eating at altitude with Yianni Papoutsis and Scott Collins". Evening Standard. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  7. Morris, Andy (2 July 2013). "Eating the best of the Big Apple with the men behind Meat Liquor". GQ. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  8. Vines, Richard (27 February 2012). "American Barbecue, Dead Hippie Burger Worth the Wait in London". Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
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