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The royal family’s most bizarre eating habits and unspoken dining rules, according to former private chef

The late Queen Elizabeth II hated the smell and taste of garlic

Rosie Fitzmaurice
Monday 25 December 2023 07:25 GMT
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Related: Royal family leaves Christmas Day service in Sandringham

In an interview with Marie Claire, Darren McGrady - who worked for the British royal family as their private chef between 1982 and 1993 - revealed some of the eating habits of the late Her Majesty the Queen, Prince Philip, the Queen Mother, Prince William and Prince Harry, and the late Princess Diana - and some are pretty bizarre.

The royal family behaved completely differently at Balmoral Castle, their holiday home in Scotland, compared to Buckingham Palace, according to McGrady. At Balmoral - where the Queen was often spotted walking her corgis and driving her own Land Rover - the family let their hair down. However, things were a little more stuffy at Buckingham Palace. Still, there were some unspoken rules to abide by and other reports, such as one in Stylist, have backed up some of McGrady's claims.

These are the royal family's most bizarre and unheard-of dining habits and rules.

The Queen Mother was always late for dinner, so they lied about the time

“Dinner was at 8.30 in Balmoral when Her Majesty the Queen Mother was in attendance," McGrady said. They used to tell her that dinner was at 8.15, and she'd be the last one down. They told everyone else 8.30 because they knew she'd be late.”

Everyone gets their gladrags on for dinner, Downtown Abbey-style

Though McGrady noted that Prince Philip was known to sometimes dress so tattily that he once mistook him for the gardener, everyone must change into formal gear for dinner.

“They'd come down in dressy ball gowns, and sit at the table - like a Downton Abbey dinner. All the fine china was brought out. At the end of the meal, a bagpipe player would walk around the table,” McGrady told Marie Claire.

Once the Queen’s done eating, so is everyone else

According to Stylist, once the Queen had finished her last morsel of food, no one was allowed to eat any more.

Philip had zero time for Prince Charles’ organic produce

According to McGrady, he once asked the chef: “Oh, is this a Harrods hamper?”

“I said, ‘No, your highness, this is a hamper the Prince of Wales brought with him.’ He looked puzzled so I opened it up and I said, ‘It's all organic.’ And he said, ‘Oh, bloody organic!’ And just shook his head and walked out.”

But he loved a family BBQ at Balmoral

“Philip would cook out on the grill,” McGrady said. “He'd come down to the kitchens and discuss what food we'd have: ‘Do we have any salmon that any of the family have caught? The Queen's been picking strawberries with Princess Margaret, let's have those for dinner.’”

The Queen used tupperware

That's right - while Her Majesty has been known to eat off diamond-encrusted or solid gold plates, she also understood the practicality of tupperware.

“At Balmoral she'd eat fruit from a plastic yellow tupperware container,” said McGrady.

The young Princes loved McDonald’s

“I remember the Princess came into the kitchen one day and said, ‘Cancel lunch for the boys I'm taking them out, we're going to McDonald’s.’” Apparently they were particularly keen on the free toy you get in a happy meal.

He went on: “The boys loved McDonald’s, and going out to pizza, and having potato skins - sort of the American foods. They were royal princes but had children's palates.”

But Princess Diana followed a strict diet of no fats or red meat

McGrady told the magazine: “One day she said to me, ‘Darren I want you to take care of all the fats, and I'll take care of the carbs at the gym.’”

He explained that when Diana was at Buckingham Palace, no one knew about her bulimia. “It wasn't until she confronted it, and everyone put two and two together, that she started really healthy eating... she liked dishes like stuffed bell peppers and stuffed eggplant - she loved fish.”

McGrady used to make her fat-free versions of dishes and she would “trick” the fellow guests into thinking she was eating the same thing.

Normally, Queen Elizabeth II picked her meals from a menu book

Just like on a first class flight, the Queen would choose her preferred dishes from a selection in advance.

“At Buckingham Palace, we'd do a menu book that we'd send up to the Queen and she could choose the dishes she wanted. The book would come back to the kitchen and we'd prepare them.”

He added that her menus were done at least three days in advance, and she stuck to them religiously.

Her one rule was no garlic

“The Queen would never have garlic on the menu. She hated the smell of it, she hated the taste of it.”

Prince Philip sometimes swapped meals with staff

McGrady recounted: “He came into the kitchen and said, ‘What's for dinner tonight?’ And I said, ‘I have these little one-inch eyes of lamb meat for you, your Royal Highness.’

“He looked and said, ‘What's that - what are they?’ And I said, ‘Oh, those are chops, Your Highness.’ He wanted to know who they were for, and I said, ‘staff.’ And he said, ‘Oh, can't we have those?’

“I ended up giving him these big meatier pieces, and the staff had the other pieces.”

Read the original article on Business Insider UK. © 2016. Follow Business Insider UK on Twitter.

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