A ‘Masterchef’ from Forth Valley is set to launch a new range of cured Scottish salmon at the Royal Highland Show next week, and is already courting interest from the USA and Dubai.

Falkirk-born Mark Heirs (29) is producing luxury Atlantic-farmed Scottish salmon – dry cured to his own secret recipe - in a mission to promote his passion: the finest cured food.

The new venture, Stirling-based Highland Curing Co, pays homage to the ancient methods of curing with a modern twist of flavours, including gin and cucumber, whisky and beetroot and the classic cure - with five more in development.

As well as demand from Scotland and London, the company has also been speaking to a New York restaurateur and a distributer in Dubai about this new addition to Scotland’s larder.

A quarter finalist of the first series of BBC programme Masterchef The Professionals in 2008, Mark who now lives in Perthshire, cut his culinary teeth in the kitchens of One Devonshire Gardens, Heston Blumenthal’s Fat Duck before becoming head chef at his family-owned Callendar Arms until 2013.

The lightbulb moment for the business came when he saw the level of interest from customers tasting his cured salmon dishes at cooking demonstrations last year. Mark noted: “I was giving away the recipes before it hit me that what people actually wanted to buy was the cured salmon. Seeing the demand made me realise there was an opportunity to open people’s eyes to the wonders of raw food and its incredible taste and texture on a larger scale.

“We have big international aspirations to spread the word about curing so to already have that interest before we’ve officially launched is very satisfying.

“Excellent provenance is key, particularly with cured food. To get those incredible flavours, it has to be the best of the best, which is why we use sustainably sourced salmon from the Outer Hebrides through the Scottish Salmon Company.

“After all, Scotland is an international powerhouse for food and Scottish salmon is its biggest export so we just want to get out there and start making a contribution in Scotland’s Year of Food and Drink.”