There are brands that begin with a product. Others, with a strategy. Ours began with a question: What if taste could be designed to be remembered?
Before the brand, there was a sensibility
No brand begins as a brand. Before the name, there is a need. Before the object, an emotion. Before the product, a story. Food Save the Queen did not emerge from a business plan. It appeared slowly — as a line, a word, a gesture. At first, it was simply a designer searching for something more within gastronomy: not only flavour, not only beauty, but meaning. A desire to create something that would not just be consumed, but felt.
On characters, not products
Very early on, something rather unusual occurred. Products refused to remain products. They became characters. Mr. & Mrs. Food emerged not as branding devices, but as necessary figures — voices through which the Maison could speak. A travelling dandy. A meticulous observer. Two sensibilities moving through the world in search of flavour, memory, and meaning. From that moment onward, everything changed. A chocolate was no longer a chocolate. It was a personality. A moment. A fragment of a larger narrative.
A house built through travel, memory and taste
Food save the Queen was never conceived as a catalogue. It is, rather, a living archive. A collection of journeys, encounters, conversations with producers, fragments of places and people — an attempt to preserve what cannot be easily contained: taste, memory, gesture. As expressed in its own Food Book, it is “an archive of what does not fit inside a box: paths, flavours, people.”
The obsession with detail
If there is a single principle that defines the House, it is this: nothing is incidental. Not the paper. Not the typography. Not the texture of a chocolate. Not the tone of a word. Every element is treated as part of a single composition. Because design, in this universe, is not decoration. It is structure. It is how meaning is held together.
On taste (and why it matters so much)
Taste, in its simplest definition, is sensory. But in practice, it is something else entirely. It is memory, identity, emotion, time. A flavour can recall a place never named. A texture can evoke something long forgotten. This is why we care so much about taste. Because it is the most immediate way to create connection. And connection, after all, is the only thing that endures.
From intuition to maison
For years, Food save the Queen existed quietly. No distribution. No structure. No urgency. Only creation. Until, eventually, it required a body. In 2020, the brand became a company. Not as a shift in direction, but as a natural continuation of something that already existed. The challenge was not to grow. But to grow without losing its essence.
What We Are (and What We Are Not)
We are not a conventional gourmet brand. We do not design for shelves. We do not create for volume. We do not speak to everyone. We are something else. A Maison that transforms products into narratives, builds collections as if they were chapters, and treats gastronomy as a cultural language. We do not aim to be large. We aim to be unforgettable.
A final note
If you have arrived here expecting an explanation, you may find instead a suggestion. Food save the Queen is not meant to be fully understood. It is meant to be experienced. Slowly. Attentively. With a certain openness. Because in the end, what we do is rather simple: we take something as fleeting as a taste… — and attempt to give it permanence.


