
Credit: Winterhalter UK
The story of Paul Ainsworth, a Southampton boy who trained under Gary Rhodes, Gordon Ramsay, and Marcus Wareing before making his way to the coastal town of Padstow and creating a restaurant that won a Michelin star in 2013, is frequently and effectively told. That narrative is accurate and well-deserved. The man behind the chef’s whites, however, is explained by a different version that is much heavier and quieter. Illness is the first step. And it keeps going back there.
Ainsworth was raised in a guest house in Southampton by his father and mother, who are from the Seychelles. He has talked about his father’s pancreatic cancer death in 2015 with a level of directness that seems to have permanently changed things. In 2019, Paul raised £43,000 for Pancreatic Cancer UK in memory of his father, giving grief a purpose and a reason. With Ainsworth, that is a pattern. He doesn’t appear to grieve in private or in silence. He expands it, transforms it into effort, and then turns it into money that is put to good use. It’s a commendable trait, but it’s also likely exhausting.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Paul Ainsworth |
| Date of Birth | 21 May 1979 |
| Place of Birth | Southampton, England |
| Nationality | British |
| Education | Southampton City College (Hospitality & Catering) |
| Occupation | Chef, Restaurateur, Television Personality |
| Flagship Restaurant | Paul Ainsworth at No. 6, 6 Middle Street, Padstow, Cornwall |
| Michelin Star | Awarded 2013 |
| Other Venues | The Mariners, Caffé Rojano, Padstow Townhouse, Cici’s Bar |
| TV Work | Great British Menu (Judge from 2018), Next Level Chef (ITV, 2023) |
| Charitable Work | Cornwall Air Ambulance Trust Ambassador; £64,478 raised for Royal Cornwall Hospital Children’s Cancer Ward |
| Reference | Wikipedia – Paul Ainsworth |
Observing him discuss his father in a variety of interviews over the years, always with the same cautious steadiness, gives the impression that his death came about in a different way than most. His famous “Tale of the Fairground” dessert was inspired by his childhood visits to the Southampton Common fairground with his father, demonstrating how nostalgia is a major source of inspiration for him. His father is still present at every service in one way or another because that dish has been on the menu at No. 6 for years. That might be intentional. Perhaps Ainsworth has never stopped preparing meals for him.
Then Coco arrived. His close friends Charlie and Faith Toogood’s two young daughters received a leukemia diagnosis two years before his 2024 fundraising campaign, completely upending their lives. As they fought the illness together, Ainsworth and his wife Emma documented their everyday struggles.
A person is affected by watching someone else’s cancer journey from the outside—the updates, the setbacks, the weeks of uncertainty. It’s not the same as actually experiencing it, but it’s also nothing. When Coco went into remission, Ainsworth decided that watching was no longer enough after seeing everything happen in real time.
He was motivated to raise as much money as he could for the Children’s Cancer Fund at Royal Cornwall Hospital, Treliske, by Coco’s remission and her mother Faith’s courage in sharing their story. To put it mildly, the approach he selected was ambitious for a man whose day job is standing in a kitchen rather than swimming across an Austrian lake. He registered for the Ironman 70.3 in Zell am See-Kaprun, which consists of a 1.2-mile lake swim, a 56-mile bike ride, and a 13.1-mile run, all of which must be finished consecutively with no notable breaks. It was his very first triathlon. He had set a goal for himself to raise £50,000.
He went beyond it. He raised more than £64,000 for the children’s cancer ward at Royal Cornwall Hospital by working with donors to raise over £53,000 in donations and almost £11,000 in Gift Aid. Around the 10-kilometer mark of the run, which is the point in any endurance event where the body starts seriously negotiating with the mind about stopping, he continued running.
Later, he claimed that thinking back on the supportive words and contributions from his supporters gave him the strength to finish. Either that’s absolutely true, or it’s a very good thing to say in public. Given what motivated him to cross the finish line, it’s most likely both.
In recent years, Ainsworth has prioritized a wellness-focused lifestyle, training for triathlons, and promoting fitness as a component of long-term health. He has publicly discussed this evolution in recent interviews. This is noteworthy because it signifies a real change for someone who works in a field that hasn’t traditionally been praised for its connection to personal well-being.
Adrenaline, long hours, and the specific kind of controlled chaos that wears people down in ways that seldom become apparent until much later are the driving forces behind professional kitchens. After his father passed away and his friend’s daughter battled cancer, Ainsworth turned to endurance sports in his mid-forties. This reads more like a reckoning than a fitness fad.
He went to the Children’s Cancer Ward at Royal Cornwall Hospital in December 2024 to celebrate the funds raised. There, he met children receiving treatment, such as little Darcy, who dressed up for the event, Sam, who told him that steak and chips were his favorite meal, and Lucas, who refused to be photographed but talked about everything related to cooking.
A Michelin-starred chef conversing about food with a child in a cancer ward during that visit is the kind of scene that doesn’t require embellishment. He talked about leaving with enduring memories of an amazing group of people supporting kids and their families during a trying time. He stated that the funds raised would be used to completely renovate the ward’s rooms, adding new furniture, better screens, mood lighting, and activities to occupy the kids’ time while they receive treatment.
One of Cornwall’s most prestigious eateries, Paul Ainsworth at Number 6, was given a Michelin star in 2013 and is listed among the top 50 UK eateries by the Good Food Guide. The star is important. The kitchen is important. Looking at the bigger picture, however, it’s difficult to avoid the impression that Ainsworth’s most significant work takes place away from the stove—in the ward hallways, on the racetrack, and in the fundraising pages. His father died of illness. His friend’s child was in danger due to illness.
Every time, he has responded by putting his body through a challenging experience and then donating the results to someone who is in greater need than he is. He has a discipline that is similar to what he learned in Gordon Ramsay’s kitchen decades ago. Quieter, though. And much more intimate.
