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Philip Harben

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Philip Harben had the first television cooking programme on TV ever, starting in 1946 on the BBC.

The series was broadcast in black and white. At some points, he had to use his own personal rations (Britain was on war rations until around 1954) as ingredients on the programmes. He showed his audience how to cook with what was available at the time: for instance, he would show them how to cook chips and steak and kidney pie. Bedecked with a marvellous beard, he spoke with a good BBC accent, and was very good-natured and happy on his shows. To go on air, he always wore a striped apron.

He wrote a column for Women's Own magazine. Harry Diamond, deputy chief sub-editor at the time, was once forced by space restrictions to remove three or four words from one of Philip's recipes, causing one of the few recorded incidents when Harben's good nature failed him. In the cooking books he also wrote, he took a rational approach, stopping to explain the chemical reactions involved, particularly in his book "The Grammar of Cookery."

He was a Freemason, a member of the Savage Club lodge in London. He was married to Katharine (Kathy) Harben.

Chronology of his life

  • 1906 -- Philip was born the son of actors Mary Jerrold and Hubert Harben. His sister, Joan Harben (1909 to 1953), would become an actress as well. Philip went to Highgate School in London, then worked for a while as a stage manager, then worked in photography for advertising, then switched to cooking.
  • 1937 -- At the age of 31, Harben became the first cook to work at the Isobar restaurant in the Lawn Road Flats building. This was a complex of flats opened in 1934 on Lawn Road in Belsize Park, London, designed by the architect Wells Coates to be for young professionals. Agatha Christie was one of the first tenants there. On the ground floor was a communal kitchen, that was converted in 1937 to the independent restaurant called "The Isobar" that Philip was engaged to run. The restaurant also served as a club for people in the building. The presence of a restaurant meant that residents of the building could have meals prepared for them without having to engage personal staff to cook it for them. Food from the restaurant could be delivered to their rooms via dumb waiters. At one point, Philip made Camembert ice-cream for the Lawn Road residents. With his wife, Philip also managed the entire building.
  • 1940 -- Philip left the Isobar to join the Royal Air Force; Robert Braun took over cooking for him at the Isobar. Sometime between 1940 and 1942, he had to have an eye operation.
  • 1942 -- Philip did cooking shows on radio.
  • 1946 -- Philip has his first TV appearance on BBC. He showed how to make lobster vol-au-vents.
  • 1953 -- In November, Philip did a special programme on Elizabethan cooking with Jeanne Heal.
  • 1953 -- In one of his programmes, Philip cooked with frozen "Nephrops Tails." Thus, he became one of the first celebrity cooks to promote not only frozen food, but also what is now known as "Scampi" (at the time, Scampi were just regarded by fishermen as part of the catch that they threw away.)
  • 1953 -- Philip did a guest appearance on the Meet Mr Lucifer show.
  • 1955 -- Philip did a guest appearance on the Man of the Moment show.
  • 1956 -- Philip appeared on the Pantomania programme on TV as the back end of a cow. He also did a guest appearance on the "What's My Line" show in America, while there on a tour promoting his book. He was also interviewed on the radio by Arlene Francis during the same tour.
  • 1957 -- first half, or 1956. Philip gave cooking demonstrations in Dublin promoting cooking with fish, sponsored by The Association of Irish Wholesale Fish Merchants. In 1957, he also did a guest appearance on the Benny Hill Show.
  • 1958 -- Philip was co-founder of Harbenware Limited in Ashton-under-Lyne, near Manchester. The company made non-stick aluminum frying pans.
  • 1960 -- Philip broadcast his first show in colour.
  • 1960s -- Philip launches "The Philip Harben Cookery Set" for children. It was a toy set, containing toy cooking utensils: a chopping board, a rolling pin, cookie cutters, a mixing bowl, a rotary whisk, a wooden spoon, plastic weigh scales, as well as miniature toy packets and cans of food such as peas, carrots, Tate & Lyle sugar, Nestle tinned milk, Ovaltine, Sifta salt, etc.
  • 1970 -- Philip died on 27 April. He was buried on the west side of Highgate Cemetery, in north London. Reputedly towards the end of his life, he had become a vegetarian.

TV Shows

(All of these were on BBC; there was just one channel in England in those days.)
  • 1946 to 51. Cookery (each episode was 20 minutes)
  • 1950. Cookery Lesson
  • 1952 to 1953. Various single-episode specials
  • 1956. What's Cooking?
  • 1964. The grammar of cookery, 13 part programme for ABC (Associated British TV) out of Didsbury, Manchester

Books

  • 1946. Cooking Quickly. London: The Bodley Head, (168 pages)
  • 1950. NEW ZEALAND LAMB Helpful Hints New Zealand Meat Producers Board, (16 pages)
  • 1951. THE POCKET BOOK OF MODERN COOKING. News of The World (203 pages)
  • 1951. Philip Harben's Television Cooking Book. London, Odhams Press (160 pages)
  • 1952. The Young Cook. Peter Nevil (foreword by Enid Blyton)
  • 1952. Entertaining at Home (with his wife.) London: Bodley Head
  • 1953. The Home Entertaining Series Cooking with Harben. London: Herbert Jenkins (96 pages)
  • 1953: Traditional Dishes of Britain. London: Bodley Head
  • 1954. Traditional dishes: a calendar of recipes. London: G Delgado Ltd (26 pages)
  • 1955. Philip Harben's Cookery Encyclopaedia. London, Odhams Press. 480 pages
  • 1956. Cooking with Harben. London: Herbert Jenkins.
  • 1956. Fish Recipes. The Association of Irish Wholesale Fish Merchants.
  • 1957. The Modern Young Cook. London: Arco Publications. (125 pages.) Published in America as "The Teenage Cook." An update of the 1952 "The Young Cook."
  • 1958. Philip Harben's Best Party Dishes. London. Arco Publications Ltd
  • 1958. Philip Harben's Best Quick Supper Dishes. London: Arco Publications Limited (60 pages)
  • 1958. Philip Harben's Best Dishes from Europe. London. Arco Publications Ltd
  • 1960. Philip Harben's Book of the Frying Pan. London: Bodley Head.
  • 1960. Cooking. Penguin.
  • 1961. IMPERIAL FRYING WITH PHILIP HARBEN. London: The Bodley Head (144 pages)
  • 1965. The grammar of cookery. Middlesex: Penguin. (295 pages)
  • 1965. The Way I Cook. London: Leslie Frewin (181 pages)
  • 1968. The Tools of Cookery. London : Hodder Paperbacks


Literature & Lore
"The Cornish pasty [is] one of the best examples in the world of what one might call functional food. For the Cornish pasty ... is not merely delicious food, it was designed for a certain quite definite purpose; it was designed to be carried to work and eaten in the hand, to be taken down the mine, to sea, to the fields. You will see a Cornishman munching his tasty pasty squatting in the narrow tin-mine workings, sitting on the nets in his leaping fishing boat, leaning against a grassy bank whilst the patient plough-horses wait."

-- Philip Harben. Traditional Dishes of Britain. London: The Bodley Head, 1953. pp 9 to 10.

"The most delightful and instructive book on cooking that I have ever read....In my opinion, not only will children love it and use it with joy, but hundreds of adults will dip into it and learn a surprising amount of elementary facts about cooking that no book has told them before. I am no cook, but his book could make me one. I am going to give a copy to each of my daughters. Mr Harben's deft touches lift the book right out of the ordinary rut. To learn the art of cookery from such a merry, friendly teacher as Mr Harben will be nothing but sheer joy to any child."

-- Enid Blyton, foreword to "The Young Cook". 1952.

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