Ridley scott

2 min read

MY LIFE IN FOOD

The director of Alien, Blade Runner and Napoleon discusses scrambled eggs, Italian restaurants and his first banana

IMAGES: SYLVAIN HUMBERT; ALAMY; STOCKFOOD; GETYY

I didn’t see a banana until I was six. Growing up, there was rationing after the Second World War until 1954, so, we ate only whatever was accessible and what was seasonal —mostly potatoes and sausages. The banana was black, and I said to my mum, “Woah!”

Coca-Cola is the best fizzy drink ever. I first experienced it when I was shipped off to Germany in 1947 with my father, who was in the army of occupation. We moved into the American zone and it was the first time I experienced the American way of life —there were soda fountains, hamburgers and raspberry milkshakes. I drink it now when I can get the real Coke in a glass bottle.

I used to eat Indian food three times a week.

It was when I moved to London at the age of 20 to study at the Royal College of Art. I had to pay for my own rent and food so I worked in a Post Office, cleaned trucks and laid concrete to support myself. I lived on Wonder loaves, bacon and eggs, peanut butter and Nescafé, but then I discovered Indian food, which wasn’t only cheap but fantastic, too. I still love it.

For the Alien dinner scene, we accurately portrayed what would be eaten in deep space.

Today, the actual packing cases on space crafts are edible. I hadn’t thought about that for Alien, but we had healthy things like grains and nonperishables. Everything has to be dried and processed in deep space.

My favourite restaurant in London is the River Cafe, which could quite possibly be the best Italian restaurant in Europe. Another favourite is Scott’s in Mayfair, which is one of the best bistros I’ve experienced in my life —partly because of the excellent service and partly because they make the best vodka martini.

The most unusual food I’ve tried was a fried grasshopper. It was when I first shot in Tokyo and was taken to Kyoto by the actor Ken Takakura. He said, “I’m going to show you Japanese food isn’t all sushi.” We went to a wonderful restaurant in the town and we had cooked Japanese food, which oddly enough felt quite Provençal. When I