Celebrity Life
Johnny Glover on His New Retail Venture Steak King
Setting up a chain of top-quality butcheries and delis in todayâs time of veggies might sound like an uphill struggle. But with his new retail venture Steak King, Johnny Glover reckons heâs on to a winner. We find out why.
At a time when we're constantly exhorted to change the way we eat, and to shift from an animal-based diet to one in which plants predominate, Johnny Glover might be said to be swimming against the tide. Because the food retailer- cum-restaurateur, who became famous among Hong Kong gourmands through earlier ventures such as Pacific Gourmet and The Butchers Club, is back in business under a new â and unashamedly carnivorous â name: Steak King.
Iâm meeting the expat Yorkshireman at The Factory, the upper-floor space â part butchery, part kitchen, part retail store and part private dining room â in the Wong Chuk Hang godown where he runs his Steak King operation. Lining the walls are voluminous glass-fronted refrigerators, packed with every cut of top-quality beef, lamb, pork and chicken imaginable, as well as sausages, pies, ready-made meals and all manner of seafood. In some cabinets, huge hunks of beef on the bone, most of them specially ordered by customers, sit for weeks on end in a humidity- and temperature-controlled dry-ageing process that will leave them richer in flavour, more tender in texture, lighter in weight and â inevitably â considerably more expensive that if theyâd been sold fresh-cut. Itâs a process that Glover introduced to Hong Kong when he set up The Butcherâs Club almost a decade ago, though rather than high-end butchery, he says he actually started out in the food-retailing business selling seafood.
âThe first location was in Ap Lei Chauâs Horizon Plaza,â he says of his first wholesale venture, which later morphed into the Pacific Gourmet stores. âIt was a warehouse, similar to this, and I put some fridges at the front. I remember on the first day I was there by myself, and I think I had about four customers that day. And then a journalist from NowTV did a little video â they filmed me with all these oysters, seafood, and these beautiful red snappers â and next day thereâs literally a queue out of the door. And I realised that by putting a shopfront on the wholesale concept, people liked it â they think theyâre getting a deal, and they are! And that concept has always stuck with me. So whatever Iâve done after that, itâs always had that look and feel about it.â
Glover admits that he gets âbored pretty easily. I have two or three years in me where Iâll kill myself to build something up and make it as big as I possibly can, and then once Iâve got it to a stage when itâs saleable Iâll try and find someone to buy it.â And thatâs exactly what happened with Pacific Gourmet, which âa rich bankerâ took off his hands around 10 years ago.
Heâd also realised pretty early on that seafood was âa ticking time bomb. Itâs stressful, itâs hard dealing with live oysters and seafood, youâve got to move it quick. And those difficulties are what brought me into meat, because [with the latter] the shelf life is one or two months, and then you can dry-age it for another two months. I like that idea, because youâre actually getting paid to let it go out of date!â
Thus, when The Butcherâs Club began â in an Aberdeen warehouse, of course â a dry-ageing room was set up alongside the rows of freezers and a table for 16 diners. It was there that Glover hosted private dinners where the star was a huge piece of beef, which attracted a high-end clientele that included âheads of state, tycoons from Singapore and tons of people from Mainland China. Quite often thereâd be a motorcade of armoured vehicles downstairs and bodyguards outside â it became a real thing. We charged upfront and at one point we had a six-month waitlist, every day including lunch on Sundays.â
In growing that brand into a chain with outlets in Singapore, Bali, mainland China and Taiwan, as well as six stores in Hong Kong, Glover also developed a penchant for what he calls âguerrilla marketing. Social media was really starting to take hold â this would have been 2013 â so I bought a pick-up truck and we wrapped it in matte black and put a big barbecue in the back. And we posted on social media that we were opening this restaurant, but the week before we were going to do a trial run in Lan Kwai Fong.
âSo we parked outside of Wagyu and 400 people showed up. Of course, the guys at Wagyu werenât happy, so they called the police, who told us to move, and we said no, knowing that they were going to arrest me. And they did, and we filmed it â and this was all live on Facebook. Of course there was an uproar, but whatever, we opened the restaurant the next week and there was a queue 200 metres long to get in. And we were doing 1,000 burgers a day, every day, for about a year. It was amazing. That restaurant was doing close to $3 million revenue a month from 400 square feet.â
True to form, having built up the The Butchers Club, Glover sold the business on around four years ago and, after a spell of gardening leave, heâs back with his latest venture. âThis journey has been about refining, all the time,â he says. âThe mistakes we made with Pacific Gourmet, I think we rectified them with The Butchers Club. And the mistakes I made with the Butchersâ Club I want to rectify with Steak King. I like retail. With restaurants thereâs lot of moving parts to mess up. And though Iâm still doing restaurants youâll notice that theyâre really, really simple and ingredients-driven.â
With branches already open in Sai Kung and Mui Wo, as well as The Factory HQ and more outlets on the way, Steak King is planned as a network of neighbourhood shops. Glover had noticed how, during Covid, people were coming into his Wong Chuk Hang warehouse to buy high-quality ingredients to cook at home, and that gave him an idea. âWhy donât we do little butcher shops and delis in residential locations around Hong Kong? Letâs not do it in Central or Causeway Bay. Letâs do it in Sai Kung, Mui Wo, Tung Chung or Tseung Kwan O, places where people live. Letâs create a corner shop where people can pick something up on their way home â a retail butcher shop, but weâll have a cafe element to them, so youâll be able to buy a sandwich, a pizza or a pie too.âThink of a 25-year-old guy,â he says of his notional customer, âwhoâs just bought his first house, and heâs just got off the MTR. He walks into our shop, he buys a steak, some veal jus, some nice herbs, a salad, and even a frying pan and a gourmet chefâs knife to cook them with.
The butcher tells him how to cook it and recommends a wine and a sauce. He buys some mashed potatoes and the whole thing goes out with him under his arm, a package that allows him to cook a Michelin-star-quality meal for him and his girlfriend whoâs waiting at home. Thatâs the idea of Steak King, itâs somewhere you can buy more or less everything youâre going to need to cook a real gourmet meal.
âAnd I donât want to put these in shopping malls. I want them beside wet markets or near to Wellcome or ParknShop, and I want [the competition] to look at us and think, âTheyâre doing it right.â You never know, maybe one day they might have to buy us out.â As to the meat-versus-plant-based debate, Gloverâs philosophy is thus: âIf youâre going to eat an animal, you should celebrate its life. If youâre going to eat a steak, donât eat a crap piece of meat every day but a good one every two weeks. But itâs not all about the meat we sell, itâs also the seafood, vegetables and herbs, they all have heritage. And in all these 25 years that Iâve been in business Iâve built up relationships with farmers and fishermen [much of his meat and seafood comes from personally selected producers in Australia], and Iâm still working with them now. I know that if Iâm ordering a case of tenderloins theyâll give me the best.â
A hotel-management graduate and experienced chef, Glover originally arrived in Hong Kong in the 1990s to teach with the Vocational Training Council and he still lectures part-time at the Polytechnic University. His role as an educator even spills out into this current venture: along with chef Brandon Tomkinson, who formerly presided over the kitchen at Gordon Ramseyâs Hong Kong restaurant, Bread Street, heâs produced a series of short videos instructing how to prepare and cook almost every item of meat and seafood he sells, which can easily by accessed online via a QR code on each product.
âWe handle it the right way and weâre teaching people how to cook it the right way,â he says. âWhat weâre selling isnât cheap, but I think itâs the best value in town. And if I can convince one in 10 to try it, to cook it well and in a certain way, if I can teach some people how to cook and educate them, then my job is done.â
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