A former Buckingham Palace chef has lifted the lid on the royal family’s eating habits – revealing how the Queen has Kellogg’s for breakfast.
Darren McGrady said the monarch loves dark chocolate, refuses to have garlic in her meals, and sometimes even eats out of Tupperware.
Prince William and Harry, meanwhile, apparently enjoy having fast food, going to McDonald’s with their mother when they were younger.
Mr McGrady worked in the Buckingham Palace kitchen for 11 years, before going on to serve Princess Diana.
A former royal chef has lifted the lid on the Queen’s eating habits, revealing how she has Kellogg’s for breakfast. The Queen is pictured here with King Felipe during the state banquet at Buckingham Palace in July
Describing the Queen’s eating habits, he told Marie Claire: ‘Breakfast was very simple for Her Majesty.
‘Some Kellogg’s cereal from a plastic container, which she’d serve herself. And some Darjeeling tea.’
He also revealed how dark chocolate was the monarch’s ‘favourite’ – but said she could not stand to have garlic in her meals because she ‘hated the smell of it’, as well as the taste.
While most would imagine that the Queen always eats off the finest crockery, the chef said that she would occasionally eat from a ‘plastic yellow Tupperware container.’
Prince William and Harry are said to enjoy having fast food, going to McDonald’s with their mother when they were younger
During his time working for Princess Diana, Mr McGrady found that her young sons loved having fast food.
He recalled: ‘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”‘.
Mr McGrady, who now runs his own catering company, has previously revealed how the Queen would be presented with a ‘menu book’, which was sent to her two or three times a week for the coming days.
Speaking in an interview with FEMAIL, he said: ‘The menu book was sent up to her and she’d put a line through the ones she didn’t want.’
Mr McGrady (pictured) worked in the Buckingham Palace kitchen for 11 years, before going on to serve Princess Diana
Explaining how the monarch played an even bigger parts in state banquets, he said: ‘She’d oversee the full menu, choose what she wanted – do we have enough pheasant, grouse, partridge?
‘She loved food from the estate and to see her own produce on the menu.’
He added: ‘She loved the hosting side of the event. Garden parties were huge we’d have to do so much food, scones and pastries, ice cream made fresh. ‘
The monarch rarely eats at restaurants but earlier this year enjoyed dinner at The Ivy for a friend’s birthday.
The chef has previously revealed how the Queen loves the ‘hosting side’ of big events and would often oversee the menu for state banquets