
Nick Frost takes his own cutlery on holiday with him
Nick Frost takes his own cutlery on vacation.
The 53-year-old actor is a keen cook and so he takes a trusty knife and other personal items he may need when he stays at an Airbnb or another location for when he is making meals for his family in the kitchen.
During an appearance on the Dish by Waitrose podcast - hosted by Nick Grimshaw and Angela Hartnett - he said: "I mean, I try not to. But sometimes it's better to have one [a knife] and not use it than to need one and not have it.
'If when we're going to an Airbnb, I'll definitely bring my kit over 'cause it's always the worst thing about turning up at an Airbnb and discovering that the [plastic bread knife]."
As well as plastic cutlery, Nick also loathes glass chopping boards.
He said: 'Or the other thing that makes me really cross are glass chopping boards. Like round glass chopping boards. It's just nuts. It feels nuts.
'Also, I think with a nice wood chopping board, it evolves over time too. It gets a little divot in it. It feels nice to touch.'
Keen amateur chef Nick declared cooking can turn people into "slight" show-offs, and he thinks that may benefit him.
The How to Train Your Dragon star explained: "I think people expect actors to be big show-offs.
"I've never been that at all, I'm just the opposite ... but I feel like cooking sometimes is a way of showing off slightly.
"Maybe that's a release I need in terms of, that took eight hours to prep. And now I hope you really love it, you know?
"But it's a lot of effort to show you care, you know.'
Nick worked in kitchens when he left school, but he did not become a professional chef because the job proved too tricky for him.
The Shaun of the Dead actor said: "I worked in kitchens when I left school. When I was like 19, 20, I started to work in kitchens and stuff.
"But it was really hard. I was still working in the kitchen until I was 28, 29, not knowing what I was going to do."
Nick did not find cooking for a living "fun", but he fell in love with it again when he could serve up dishes to his friends and family.
The star - who has a son called Mac with his wife Christina Frost - said: "When you do it for a living it becomes less fun.
"And then I started to be an actor, and then I didn't have to get in for 6am and leave at 1am anymore. I got to do it for my friends and family, and I just fell in love with it again.
"I can now give something back, and it's not like, having to cook food for horrible people, you know?'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
6 days ago
- Perth Now
Kevin Jonas couldn't raise his daughters without the support of his wife
Kevin Jonas couldn't raise his daughters without the support of his wife. The 37-year-old pop star grew up with brothers, Joe, 35, and Nick, 32, and found fame with them as part of a pop trio in the late 2000s but admitted on Father's Day (15.06.25) that being father to girs Alena, 11, and eight-year-old Valentina with his wife Danielle is very much an "unknown territory" to him. He told E! News: "It's really special, but it's also unknown territory for me, which is why I sometimes respond and react to situations like it would have been with boys. Then my wife looks at me like, 'No, the exact opposite of what you're doing, we need to do that!' "I could not do it without her. She's the guiding light in our family." Along with his brothers, Nick made several appearances on the Disney Channel at the height of his fame and revealed that their movie Camp Rock - which also starred Demi Lovato and first aired on the network in 2008 - is a favourite of theirs, as is fellow musical franchise Zombies. "They love Camp Rock. "Camp Rock is huge. It's just not as big as Descendants or, especially now, Zombies. "Zombies is coming out with their new movie in June and I know this because I'm a huge girl dad, who's gonna bring them to the concert tour and do the whole thing." Nick then revealed that his daughters recently filmed an upcoming Christmas special with him and that his eldest seems set to follow in his footsteps, but insisted that he will never "push" her to do so. He said: "They're actually in the film, and they had a really good time. "My oldest daughter definitely started to do the thing. She started to see what it's like on set. She said to me, 'I really want to be an actress.' "She really enjoyed it, but I will never push them to do it.


Perth Now
6 days ago
- Perth Now
How to Train Your Dragon director Dean DeBlois eyeing Cate Blanchett for live-action sequel
How to Train Your Dragon director Dean DeBlois wants Cate Blanchett to appear in the sequel. The 56-year-old actress voiced Hiccup's mother Valka Haddock in the original animated Dreamworks trilogy, and DeBlois - who helmed the first three films, as well as the 2025 live-action remake - wants to bring Blanchett back for his upcoming live-action take on How to Train Your Dragon 2. Speaking about Blanchett's possible involvement with How to Train Your Dragon 2 with the 55-year-old filmmaker said: 'Well, I'm wishful as well. It's still early days. 'I think she is probably waiting for a script, but I've been knocking on that door. I wrote the character of Valka for her, so I told her it'll always be hers to turn down first.' DeBlois added Valka wouldn't be the only character to take on a slightly different look in How to Train Your Dragon 2 if Blanchett doesn't portray the warrior in the movie, as Toothless the dragon will also have matured by the second instalment. He explained: 'We knew we were going to go there. The idea is that Toothless is roughly Hiccup's age in dragon years, so he is a juvenile, an adolescent, as well, ageing into adulthood. 'That is going to alter his design in subtle ways, but mostly it's going to alter his mentality because he's a very sentient dragon. 'He has his own opinions about everything, and he'll also start to come into his own as a leader of his kind.' While the sequel is still in the writing stage at the moment, DeBlois teased he was paying particular attention to translating How to Train Your Dragon 2's heavier scenes to the live-action adaptation. He said: 'Certainly in the second movie, tackling the whole idea of Toothless being weaponised and turned against Hiccup and Stoic intervening like that, that's a pretty heavy moment. It was heavy for animation. 'I think it'll get even weightier in live-action, so I look forward to that, too, because there's something about the second movie. 'That, for most fans, is their favourite because it tackles tougher subject matter. It's a little bit darker and more expansive, so I'm looking forward to it. I'm only writing right now, but I'll get there. I'll definitely get there.' How to Train Your Dragon - which stars Mason Thames, Nico Parker, Gerard Butler and Nick Frost - follows Hiccup the Viking who befriends the dragon Toothless and challenges his village's fears of the big beasts. Recently, Parker addressed the online backlash to her casting as Astrid, with some saying the 20-year-old actress was a bad fit for the dragonslayer as she doesn't have blonde hair and blue eyes like the character seen in the original animated trilogy. Speaking with The Times of London, she said: 'There's some people that really love the animated movies and really want to see an exact play-by-play of that film, and I hope that you can watch [the new version] and find something that you love about it, regardless. 'But for the people that just hate inclusivity, hate change — when it comes to that side of things, I just don't care.' 'If I wouldn't value your opinion on most things in life, I can't value your opinion on my hair. If I did, I would go mad.'


Perth Now
6 days ago
- Perth Now
Nick Frost takes his own cutlery on holiday with him
Nick Frost takes his own cutlery on vacation. The 53-year-old actor is a keen cook and so he takes a trusty knife and other personal items he may need when he stays at an Airbnb or another location for when he is making meals for his family in the kitchen. During an appearance on the Dish by Waitrose podcast - hosted by Nick Grimshaw and Angela Hartnett - he said: "I mean, I try not to. But sometimes it's better to have one [a knife] and not use it than to need one and not have it. 'If when we're going to an Airbnb, I'll definitely bring my kit over 'cause it's always the worst thing about turning up at an Airbnb and discovering that the [plastic bread knife]." As well as plastic cutlery, Nick also loathes glass chopping boards. He said: 'Or the other thing that makes me really cross are glass chopping boards. Like round glass chopping boards. It's just nuts. It feels nuts. 'Also, I think with a nice wood chopping board, it evolves over time too. It gets a little divot in it. It feels nice to touch.' Keen amateur chef Nick declared cooking can turn people into "slight" show-offs, and he thinks that may benefit him. The How to Train Your Dragon star explained: "I think people expect actors to be big show-offs. "I've never been that at all, I'm just the opposite ... but I feel like cooking sometimes is a way of showing off slightly. "Maybe that's a release I need in terms of, that took eight hours to prep. And now I hope you really love it, you know? "But it's a lot of effort to show you care, you know.' Nick worked in kitchens when he left school, but he did not become a professional chef because the job proved too tricky for him. The Shaun of the Dead actor said: "I worked in kitchens when I left school. When I was like 19, 20, I started to work in kitchens and stuff. "But it was really hard. I was still working in the kitchen until I was 28, 29, not knowing what I was going to do." Nick did not find cooking for a living "fun", but he fell in love with it again when he could serve up dishes to his friends and family. The star - who has a son called Mac with his wife Christina Frost - said: "When you do it for a living it becomes less fun. "And then I started to be an actor, and then I didn't have to get in for 6am and leave at 1am anymore. I got to do it for my friends and family, and I just fell in love with it again. "I can now give something back, and it's not like, having to cook food for horrible people, you know?'