The Live Fire Hosts set is the most complete gift we make. At £200, it is also the most significant purchase in the range. Here is what goes into it and who it is designed for.
What is in it
Two Couple’s Aprons. Two King Forks. Two BBQ Blades. One Trio Skewer.
Everything doubled except the skewer, which is shared. The brief was direct: a couple who seriously entertain outdoors, both of whom cook, both of whom work the fire. Not one cook and one observer — two cooks, both equipped, both protected, both with the tools they need to run a full session simultaneously.
Two aprons means both cooks are protected and kitted out. Two King Forks means both cooks can work the fire at the same time — neither is waiting for the other to finish with a tool. Two BBQ Blades means both can manage the grate and carve at their own station. The Trio Skewer is shared because when you are cooking together, you do not need two sets of skewers — you need one good set that handles the volume.
The value case
Bought individually, the same items total £255. The Live Fire Hosts set is £200. That is a genuine saving, not a manufactured discount — the products are the same, the construction is the same, the materials are the same. The saving reflects the fact that a complete set purchase is more efficient for us to process and ship.
Who it is for
The Live Fire Hosts set is positioned for significant occasions: milestone anniversaries, housewarming gifts for couples who are building or have built an outdoor kitchen, and wedding gifts for couples whose shared interest is outdoor cooking and entertaining. It is not a casual gift. It is a considered one — given by someone who understands what they are buying and why it matters.
The test we applied when designing the set was simple: does every single item in this box get used? For the Live Fire Hosts, the answer is yes. Every item has a specific job. Nothing is padding. Nothing is there to increase the visual weight of the package. The Couple’s Aprons get worn. The King Forks go to the fire. The BBQ Blades go to the grate. The Trio Skewer goes on the coals.
That is the standard we hold every set to. If an item cannot justify its presence by function, it does not go in.


