A Table in the Corner

Russel Wasserfall Media

A Table in the Corner is the space where Russel Wasserfall chats to people in the food industry about their passion and their take on the business of eating. Russel has worked in the media and food space for over 3 decades. He's run bars, restaurants and a confectionery factory, written for dozens of food and travel publications and made a bunch of cookbooks. His show is about the nitty-gritty of the food trade in all its forms. Top chefs, food artisans, proprietors, bakers, farmers, foragers, cheesemakers, writers, photographers, bloggers... you name it. If they’re involved in the food industry, you will meet them with Russel at A Table in the Corner. 

  1. S2-34. CW Beau Constantia - Liam Tomlin

    2d ago

    S2-34. CW Beau Constantia - Liam Tomlin

    In this episode of A Table in the Corner, I sit down with chef and restaurateur Liam Tomlin. It was supposed to be a chat about the milestone ten years of Chef’s Warehouse at Beau Constantia, but we leapt into meatier matters. I also discovered that Thali is ten this year too, having opened within weeks of Beau. What follows is less a conversation about individual restaurants and more a look at the extraordinary influence Liam has had on Cape Town’s dining landscape over the past two decades. From a tiny cookery school and deli in a house off Buitensingel Street, Chef’s Warehouse has grown into a group of nine restaurants spanning Cape Town, the Winelands and even Hamburg, Germany. Along the way, Liam has helped shape not only restaurants, but a generation of chefs.  We talk about the people who have passed through his kitchens, including chefs such as John van Zyl, Jason Kosmas, Ivor Jones and many others who have gone on to lead some of South Africa’s most respected restaurants. Liam reflects on mentorship, partnership and why giving talented chefs room to grow has been central to the success of the Chef’s Warehouse group.  The conversation also explores the realities of running restaurants in 2026. We discuss rising costs, winter trading, the pressures facing hospitality businesses around the world and why maintaining quality has become more challenging than ever. Liam shares his thoughts on restaurant specials, staff retention, customer expectations and the constant balancing act required to keep great restaurants alive.  We also touched on his years in Australia, the evolution of Cape Town as a global food destination and his latest project: a boutique hotel that will add yet another chapter to an already remarkable career.  If you've ever wondered how Chef’s Warehouse became one of the defining restaurant groups in South Africa, or how a single chef’s influence can ripple through an entire dining scene, this is a conversation well worth hearing. www.rwm2012.comOn Instagram @a_table_inthecornerCover image sketched by Courtney Cara LawsonAll profile portraits by Russel Wasserfall unless otherwise creditedTitle music: 'In Time' by Olexy via Pixabay

    41 min
  2. S2-33. Table For Two - Jonathan Warncke

    Jun 9

    S2-33. Table For Two - Jonathan Warncke

    In this episode of A Table in the Corner, the tables are turned as I sit down with my friend, collaborator and occasional culinary guinea pig, Jonathan Warncke. Best known as chairman of the South African Podcasters Guild, Jonathan has recently stepped into the food world as my co-host on Table for Two, our new YouTube series exploring some of Cape Town’s most interesting restaurants.  We talk about the origins of the show, why a self-confessed fussy eater who had never tasted oysters, prawns or mussels agreed to become the audience proxy on a food programme, and what happens when curiosity collides with a tasting menu. Jonathan reflects on his first encounters with ingredients he’d spent a lifetime avoiding, and why some experiences have changed his mind while others have only confirmed his suspicions.  The conversation also wanders through his years living in Japan, his love of restaurants despite his selective palate, the surprising nuances of taste, and the strange experience of being recognised in public only weeks after Table for Two launched. Along the way we discuss food media, restaurant culture, the future of our growing collection of video projects and why great hospitality is about far more than what lands on the plate.  If you've watched Table for Two and wondered who the guy in the red glasses is, this is your chance to find out. www.rwm2012.comOn Instagram @a_table_inthecornerCover image sketched by Courtney Cara LawsonAll profile portraits by Russel Wasserfall unless otherwise creditedTitle music: 'In Time' by Olexy via Pixabay

    23 min
  3. S2-32. Three Wise Monkeys + Ora - Ricky Simon

    Jun 2

    S2-32. Three Wise Monkeys + Ora - Ricky Simon

    In this episode of A Table in the Corner, I sit down with restaurateur Ricky Simon, the driving force behind Cape Town favourites Three Wise Monkeys, Una Más and the soon-to-opened Ora in Sea Point. Ricky grew up in the restaurant business. His father introduced the Mongolian barbecue concept to South Africa in the late 1980s, and some of Ricky’s earliest memories are of restaurant kitchens, dining rooms and the rhythms of hospitality. That upbringing shaped the way he thinks about food, service and the experience of eating out. Our conversation explores what makes a restaurant work beyond the food on the plate. We talk about location, atmosphere, community and why some restaurants become institutions while others disappear within a few years. Ricky shares his philosophy of creating smaller, more intimate spaces, building long-term relationships with staff and guests, and designing restaurants that people genuinely want to return to. We also discuss the evolution of Three Wise Monkeys, the lessons learned from a decade of trading in Sea Point and the thinking behind Ora, his new Mediterranean-inspired project that draws influence from across the countries that touch the Mediterranean rather than following a single culinary tradition. Along the way, we chat about family businesses, staff retention, restaurant culture and the realities of a profession that demands long hours, personal sacrifice and a genuine love of looking after people. It’s a conversation about hospitality as craft, restaurants as places of memory and why the best operators are often thinking about much more than what’s on the menu.  www.rwm2012.comOn Instagram @a_table_inthecornerCover image sketched by Courtney Cara LawsonAll profile portraits by Russel Wasserfall unless otherwise creditedTitle music: 'In Time' by Olexy via Pixabay

    32 min
  4. S2-31. Hunt & Gather - Richard Bosman

    May 26

    S2-31. Hunt & Gather - Richard Bosman

    In this episode of A Table in the Corner, I sit down with charcutier Richard Bosman to talk about Hunt & Gather, the new biltong project he has developed with Jerome Gluckman. Richard has spent years working with cured meats, preservation and the science behind flavour. With Hunt & Gather, he turns that knowledge towards one of South Africa’s most iconic foods, asking what biltong might look like if it were made with fewer shortcuts and a much cleaner ingredient list. We talk about grass-fed beef from the Eastern Cape, probiotic cultures, polyphenols extracted from fruit and why so much packaged biltong contains ingredients most people would not expect to find there. Richard explains how the product is designed to retain the flavour and texture of traditional biltong while avoiding chemical preservatives, gluten and the batch-pack approach common in commercial production. The conversation also reaches back to Ötzi the Iceman, early forms of preserved meat and the long human history of drying, curing and carrying protein. From there, we get into mould, shelf life, Worcester sauce made from scratch and the practical challenge of taking a cleaner, more considered biltong to market. It’s a conversation about craft, chemistry, curiosity and a South African staple being rethought by someone who understands preservation from the inside.  www.rwm2012.comOn Instagram @a_table_inthecornerCover image sketched by Courtney Cara LawsonAll profile portraits by Russel Wasserfall unless otherwise creditedTitle music: 'In Time' by Olexy via Pixabay

    27 min
  5. S2-30. Farro - Alex Windebank

    May 19

    S2-30. Farro - Alex Windebank

    In this episode of A Table in the Corner, I sit down with Alex Windebank of Farro, the small, open-kitchen restaurant just off Dunkley Square that recently had to close when the building’s utilities were cut due to unpaid municipal debt by the landlord. Fully booked services had to be cancelled overnight, income dried up like the taps, and there was no clear timeline for reopening. We get into what that actually meant on the ground. Not the headline, but the day-to-day reality of a small, owner-run restaurant operating on tight margins. Staff to consider, guests to manage, debts still due. It’s a sharp reminder of how exposed independent restaurants are to forces outside their control. Alex also traces the path that brought him and Eloise here, from London kitchens to Johannesburg, and eventually to Farro in Cape Town. It’s a business built from scratch, without backing, shaped by hard decisions about how and where to operate. At its core, Farro is a partnership. Alex cooking simply and precisely, Eloise running the room, both present and hands-on. And when things went wrong, it was the wider restaurant community that stepped in, offering support in practical ways that kept them going. A conversation about resilience, risk and what it takes to keep a small restaurant alive. www.rwm2012.comOn Instagram @a_table_inthecornerCover image sketched by Courtney Cara LawsonAll profile portraits by Russel Wasserfall unless otherwise creditedTitle music: 'In Time' by Olexy via Pixabay

    42 min
  6. S2-29. The Kraal Restaurant - Susan Dehosse

    May 11

    S2-29. The Kraal Restaurant - Susan Dehosse

    At The Kraal Restaurant on Joostenberg Farm, Susan Dehosse is cooking from a place that predates current trends around farm-to-table experiences. In this episode of A Table in the Corner, we talk about how a working farm, a family legacy, and a career shaped in European kitchens come together in a restaurant that feels both grounded and personal. Susan traces her path from early training in Stellenbosch and at Le Quartier Français to the discipline of London’s 3 Michelin starred Waterside Inn, before returning to South Africa to help build restaurants during the early wave of post-1994 growth. Alongside her husband Christophe, she played a role in explosion of Western Cape restaurant culture.  At Joostenberg, that experience is filtered through something more instinctive. The Kraal sits on the family farm where her grandmother once cooked simple meals in the post-war years so the family could keep the farm. That thread of practicality and generosity still runs through the food today, but it’s balanced with classical technique and a lighter, more considered approach to structure and flavour. The conversation also moves through the growth of Klein Joostenberg Bistro & Deli, the realities of building a sustainable farm business, and the importance of people in long-term operations. Susan speaks candidly about stepping into her own space at The Kraal, supported by a team that has grown with the business over decades. www.rwm2012.comOn Instagram @a_table_inthecornerCover image sketched by Courtney Cara LawsonAll profile portraits by Russel Wasserfall unless otherwise creditedTitle music: 'In Time' by Olexy via Pixabay

    29 min
  7. S2-28. Vadas Smokehouse & Bakery - PJ Vadas

    May 4

    S2-28. Vadas Smokehouse & Bakery - PJ Vadas

    In this episode of A Table in the Corner, I chat to PJ Vadas at his Smokehouse & Bakery on Spier Wine Estate. We talk plainly about what it actually costs to keep a restaurant running, and why so many operators are under pressure right now. From refrigeration repair invoices that spiralled to over R100k to the constant recalibration of menus, staffing and pricing, PJ lays out the economics behind the plate. It’s a frank look at an industry where margins are tight, expectations are high, and every decision, from ingredient sourcing to glassware, has a cost attached.  We follow his journey, from the fine dining intensity of The Roundhouse to building a large, broader operation at Spier. PJ explains why he moved away from fine diners, how diversification across bakery, retail and casual dining helps stabilise the business, and why one well-run, high-volume restaurant can offer more control than multiple smaller sites. There’s also a frank take on kitchen culture, training and the realities of learning the craft. PJ speaks about time spent in demanding kitchens, the value of discipline, and the difference between pressure that builds skill and environments that simply break people down. What emerges is a practical philosophy: know your numbers, charge what you need to survive, and build a restaurant that fits your life, not the other way around. www.rwm2012.comOn Instagram @a_table_inthecornerCover image sketched by Courtney Cara LawsonAll profile portraits by Russel Wasserfall unless otherwise creditedTitle music: 'In Time' by Olexy via Pixabay

    36 min
  8. S2-27. Seebamboes - Adél Hughes & Liebet Jooste

    Apr 27

    S2-27. Seebamboes - Adél Hughes & Liebet Jooste

    In this episode of A Table in the Corner, Russel Wasserfall sits down with chef Adél Hughes and artist-host Liebet Jooste, the couple behind Seebamboes. Their restaurant, tucked above Galjoen on Harrington Street, forms part of the same restaurant family as Belly of the Beast. The conversation explores how Seebamboes operates as a collaboration between kitchen and dining room. Adél cooks with ingredients that arrive from small producers, fishermen and foragers, often shaping dishes around what turns up that day. Liebet, drawing on her background as a visual artist, guides guests through the meal, helping frame the experience and the stories behind the ingredients. Russel traces how the project began with a small takeaway operation in Betty’s Bay before finding a home in Cape Town. Along the way the discussion touches on West Coast foodways, the use of seaweeds and coastal plants, and the realities of cooking with ingredients that are seasonal, unpredictable and deeply tied to place. It’s a conversation about storytelling through food: how a menu becomes a narrative, how chefs and front of house work together to shape the experience, and how a meal can reconnect diners with the landscapes and ingredients that surround the Western Cape coast. Seebamboes will also feature in an upcoming Table for Two episode on the A Table in the Corner YouTube channel. Launching in early May, the new video series sees Russel and co-host Jonathan Warnke visiting some of their favourite Cape Town restaurants, sharing the experience of the meal from two perspectives: one from inside the hospitality industry, and one from the curious diner at the table. www.rwm2012.comOn Instagram @a_table_inthecornerCover image sketched by Courtney Cara LawsonAll profile portraits by Russel Wasserfall unless otherwise creditedTitle music: 'In Time' by Olexy via Pixabay

    34 min

About

A Table in the Corner is the space where Russel Wasserfall chats to people in the food industry about their passion and their take on the business of eating. Russel has worked in the media and food space for over 3 decades. He's run bars, restaurants and a confectionery factory, written for dozens of food and travel publications and made a bunch of cookbooks. His show is about the nitty-gritty of the food trade in all its forms. Top chefs, food artisans, proprietors, bakers, farmers, foragers, cheesemakers, writers, photographers, bloggers... you name it. If they’re involved in the food industry, you will meet them with Russel at A Table in the Corner. 

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