“From Sri Lanka, I’ve gained Buddhism, the love of family, respect for others and being well-turned out before you leave the house”
She was 18, olive skinned and sported a freckle masquerading as a bindi in the middle of her forehead. The head chef looked at the restaurant’s newest junior waitress, saw that faux bindi, thought she was Sri Lankan (or Indian) and struck up a conversation that hasn’t waned in 32 years.
That was how Peter Jayantha Kuruvita met his soul mate Karen – who besides being an amazing life partner is also his business manager, financial controller, PR agent and surfing companion.
Peter had three childhoods: in London, Colombo and Sydney.
When he was four, his father Wickramapala converted a van into a camper and took his Austrian wife Lily and their three boys overland from London to Sri Lanka through Europe, Turkey, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. Their extended family in Sri Lanka spoiled young Peter – who while getting his hands dirty on his father’s lathe machines would also follow his grandmother and aunts around the kitchen.
Peter’s 13th birthday was in Sydney when the family decided to migrate… and it marked the beginning of troubled teen years. Legally allowed to leave school at the age of 15 years and nine months, Peter dropped out; but not before he promised his father to shadow him at work and make himself useful.
But Wickramapala noticed Peter’s enthusiasm in the kitchen; and not long after that, he drove Peter to a nearby restaurant and told him to apply for a job. Peter was immediately hired – to cut garlic bread.
This celebrity chef, who has published three books, is now one of the most recognised on television. He’s the restaurateur behind the Flying Fish chain and Noosa Beach House among others.
Peter Kuruvita is a devoted family man who only sees the brighter side of life. Quite the grease monkey, he wishes there was more time to spend restoring his vintage motorcycles. In the meantime, he’s proud that he managed to perfect the art of making sourdough during the lockdown.
BIRTHDAY
22 October
FAMILY
Parents (Wickramapala and Lily)
Wife (Karen)
Sons (Jai, Marley and Taj)
Brothers (Philip Susantha and David Sanjeewa)
Doggie (Chilli)
ALMA MATERS
Overseas School of Colombo (OCS)
Doonside Public School
Peakhurst High School (Sydney)
East Sydney TAFE
HOBBIES
Restoring motorbikes
Surfing
Fishing
LOVES
Karen
Family
Chilli
PET PEEVES
Negative people
ALWAYS WANTED TO BE
Happy
ADMIRES
Hard work
Karen – for strengthening us
ROLE MODELS
My parents – “They showed us that an immigrant family can overcome trials and tribulations, and succeed.”
“My restaurant kitchens are organised and run with military precision in an empowering environment that produces food we are passionate about”
Prawn or crab
Crab
Love cake or jaggery cake
Love cake
Pineapple or mango
Mango
Fish or meat
Fish
Pepper or chilli
Chilli
Wine or cocktail
Wine
Wok or clay pot
Wok
Sri Lankan or Indian
Sri Lankan
Street cafe or restaurant
Street cafe
Sea or river
Sea
Outdoors or indoors
Outdoors
Beach or mountains
Beach
Bike or hike
Bike
Shorts or capris
Shorts
T-shirt or shirt
Shirt
Hat or cap
Cap
Slippers or sandals
Slippers
Comedy or thriller
Comedy
Film or play
Film
Quiet or raucous
Raucous
Aussie rules or cricket
Cricket
4WD or sports car
4WD
Jazz or rock
Rock
CHEFS
Thomas Keller (TheFrench Laundry)
The late Anthony Bourdain
French master Georges Blanc
CUISINE HOTSPOTS
Colombo
Sydney
London
Guangzhou
Tokyo
San Francisco
Taipei
Mumbai
Kerala
INGREDIENTS
Curry leaves
Coconut
Chilli
SPICES
Turmeric
Cinnamon
Black pepper
DISHES TO COOK AND EAT
Rice and curry
Chilli crab
Steak
WINES
A good Shiraz
A Margaret River Chardonnay
French Champagne
RESTAURANTS
Golden Century in Chinatown (Sydney)
Ministry of Crab (Colombo)
Troisgros (Central France)
SPORTSMEN/WOMEN
Mahela Jayawardene
Kumar Sangakkara
Ian Haley
Cathy Freeman
CLOTHES
Indian style collarless shirts
Slacks
R. M. Williams boots
HOLIDAY DESTINATIONS
Fiji
Sri Lanka
Thailand
CAUSES
Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia
Dry July foundation
The Fred Hollows Foundation
“My bucket list would include retiring tomorrow, having more family time and taking a trip to the Andes”
Q: What are the best lessons you’ve learned during lockdown?
A: We work too hard for too long and for too little in the hospitality industry in Australia. The focus should be more on family and making health a priority.
Q: How much of your heritage is reflected in you?
A: I’m a chameleon – put me anywhere and I’ll assimilate. From Sri Lanka, I’ve gained Buddhism, the love of family, respect for others and being well-turned out before you leave the house.
The Australian side of me is fun loving and outdoorsy. And the Austrian part is a passion for food, connection to Europe and love of classical music, which my mum had flowing through our home.
Q: So who cooks at home?
A: I generally cook; and when I don’t, Karen does. Our kitchen table could have anything from around the world. Chicken satay, which was the first dish I learned to cook at Crabapple (the first restaurant I worked at), still remains a hot favourite even 40 years later.
Q: Are your children kitchen oriented too?
A: Yes, everyone cooks. Our son Marley is the most adventurous, trying out dishes he sees on YouTube.
Q: And what’s family time like?
A: We surf and fish a lot. Downtime would be watching a film together and lots of conversation.
Q: How did you manage your first stint as the Executive Chef of Hayman Island Resort?
A: I had been made redundant. We had two babies, a mortgage to pay and no money in the bank. The job was daunting because I had to overlook 120 chefs, 50 kitchen hands, nine restaurants, two room service restaurants, cook 500 staff meals daily and take on the procurement for this million dollar resort, which hosted the very rich.
I really didn’t know what I was doing but my dad always said: “Listen and learn. Someone will come along and teach you how.” And that’s exactly what happened.
Q: What are your restaurant kitchens like?
A: My restaurant kitchens are organised and run with military precision in an empowering environment that produces food we are passionate about.
Q: Describe one of your most horrible experiences…
A: When I was made redundant, I signed up with Chefs on the Run as a temp chef. In one restaurant, the entire kitchen staff had walked out, and the smell of rats and rotten food was pervasive. I served 50 people that day and never returned.
Q: Whom have you cooked for?
A: The King and Queen of Spain, King and Queen of Thailand, Mick Jagger, Jerry Hall, Nicole Kidman, Paul and Linda McCartney, INXS’ Michael Hutchence and all his girlfriends, and Kylie Minogue among others.
But as long as the bill is paid, everyone’s a VIP in my restaurants.
Q: How do you start your day?
A: I’m normally awake by 5 a.m., have a cup of Dilmah Tea, bake my bread, tidy the kitchen, stack the dishwasher, clean the pool or build something in the garage. I like to keep myself busy.
Q: What’s your quirkiest habit?
A: Pretending to be a super spy and speaking in made-up languages.
Q: If you could be someone else for a day, who would you be?
A: A forklift driver working in a supermarket.
Q: What’s on your bucket list?
A: My bucket list would include retiring tomorrow, having more family time and taking a trip to the Andes.