Chasing what is still missing
Bjarke Jeppesen has won most of what there is to win in Denmark and across Europe. Now his focus is on the World Championship and on becoming just a little better every time he steps into the kitchen.
It starts long before he enters the competition kitchen.
In the months leading up to the World Championship, the same movements are repeated. Flavors are refined. Elements are cut, reworked and built up from scratch. All with one goal: that everything falls perfectly into place when it matters. Because in a World Championship kitchen, even the smallest details are measured and judged.
“I am not a world champion yet. It would be a bit more fun to be able to say that I am.”
Bjarke Jeppesen has already won most titles at national and European level. Still, it is not the titles that drive him. It is the process, the development and the details. And the pursuit of becoming just a little better every time he steps into the kitchen even when no one is watching.
It started with a fish
His path into the culinary world did not begin in a kitchen, but by the water.
At 15, Bjarke Jeppesen attended a Danish folk high school with a fishing program. The students caught their own fish and were responsible for preparing them. The rule was simple: you could keep what you caught, if you cooked and ate it yourself. It sparked something.
“I loved the idea of catching your own fish but also cooking it and eating it.”
When he returned home, he had no doubt. He wanted to become a chef. Curiosity took over. And the joy of creating something meaningful for others.
“I think it is about giving people a great experience.”
Craft comes first
He trained at Hotel Hesselet in Nyborg. There were no shortcuts. No rushing.
Everything was made from scratch. Mayonnaise, remoulade, pickled herring. If it could be made in house, it was. It quickly became part of his approach to cooking.
“You do not buy something if you can make it yourself.”
That craftsmanship still defines him today. It shapes his style in the kitchen, where it is not just about taste, but about understanding the entire process from raw ingredient to finished dish.
But one thing remains constant. He is always searching for new ways to improve.




