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Iain Hewitson

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Iain Hewitson
Born (1948-10-04) 4 October 1948 (age 76)
Culinary career
Previous restaurant(s)
  • Fleurie, Toorak Champagne Charlie's, Toorak
    The Last Aussie Fishcaf, South Melbourne
    Clichy, Collingwood
    Tolarno Bar & Bistro, St Kilda
    Barney Allen's Bar Diner, St Kilda (co-owned)
    Big Huey's Diner, South Melbourne
Television show(s)
Websitehueyscookingclub.com.au

Iain "Huey" Hewitson (born 4 October 1948), is a New Zealand–born chef, restauranteur, author and television personality who moved to Australia in 1972.[1] He is best known for his television involvement with Network Ten. He was also the face of supermarket chain BI-LO.

TV career

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Between 1992 and 1998, Hewitson appeared on the Ten lifestyle show Healthy, Wealthy and Wise, in which he presented the cooking segments.[2] Until December 2005, Hewitson was a regular chef on the networks morning talk program GMA with Bert Newton. Ensuing programs with his participation include Huey's TV Dinner and Never Trust a Skinny Cook. He has hosted Huey's Cooking Adventures (1997–2010) and Huey's Kitchen (2010–2014).

After retiring from television, Hewitson made the transition to YouTube in July 2017. He uploaded his first video titled 'A Perfect Steak for One' in August that same year and new cooking videos are uploaded every week.[3]

Hewitson stated on his retirement from the television screens

I was tired, I really was. I needed a break because people tell you that television is the most wonderful thing. You film for two or three weeks every single day and then you get on a plane and come home. It's not glamourous and we travelled a lot and I was sick of it. I needed a break.[4]

Restaurants

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  • Tolarno Eating House & Bar, St Kilda, Victoria, Australia[5]
  • Big Huey's Diner, South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia[6]

Musician

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In the 1960s, Hewitson was a folk singer as well as a member of bands "Cellophane" and "Sebastian's Floral Array". Both of them were winners in the New Zealand version of the Battle of the Bands competitions.[7][8]

In 1968, he became a member of a band called 691. At the end of the year the band had become Cellophane. The line-up included Hewitson on vocals, Dave Wellington on lead guitar, Michael Hill on bass, Pam Potter on keyboards, and John Van der Ryden on drums. They were managed by Colin Misseldine. In 1969 they recorded and self-produced four tracks for pye at HMV studios for Pye. The songs included a cover of the Arthur Brown psychedelic rock hit "Fire"; "Mind Patterns", which was written by Hewitson; and "I Can’t Quit Her". The band broke up in 1970.[9] "Fire", backed with "Mind Patterns", was released on Pye 7N-14009.[10] Both "Hey Joe" by Sebastian's Floral Array, and "Fire" by Cellophane, appear on the various-artists compilation A Day in My Mind's Mind Volume 4.[11][12]

According to Hewitson, one of his favorite things is the Rickenbacker guitar along with the Vox amplifier his wife bought for him as a surprise Christmas present.[13]

In 2009, at the end of one of his shows, he got his guitar out and, along with his seven-year-old daughter Charlotte, sang "Octopus's Garden", a Beatles song.[14]

Releases

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Books

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  • Never Trust a Skinny Cook : Huey's Culinary Travelogue – Allen & Unwin – 2005 – ISBN 1741146925
  • Huey's Greatest Hits – Allen & Unwin – 2003 – ISBN 1865088609
  • A Cook's Journey More Than 150 Recipes from TV's Top Chef – Viking, Melbourne, 1993 – ISBN 0670906239
  • The Huey Diet – Allen & Unwin -2001 – ISBN 1865085596

References

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