For the Love of Food: Q&A with Henry Watts on the vision behind Angel Hill Food Co.

Following the launch of the refreshed brand, we spoke with Henry Watts, Managing Director for Angel Hill Food Co. about the thinking behind the relaunch, what customers and colleagues can expect, and why food and the people who prepare it sit at the heart of the vision.

What inspired the relaunch of Angel Hill Food Co.?

Angel Hill Food Co. sits on strong foundations, but it reached a natural moment of change. The business OCS acquired in 2012 had served the B&I market well for many years, but the brand no longer reflected where the offer had grown to or where it was heading.

The Angel Hill name itself is rooted in heritage. It comes from Bury St Edmunds, where the Servest business, a forerunner of OCS, began. Angel Hill is the street where that story started, being one of the oldest food markets in the country and a centre of culinary excellence and exploration. The relaunch reconnects the catering offer to its origin, while giving it a clearer, more contemporary identity that reflects the quality of food and service now being delivered.

What will customers notice first about the new brand?

The most important change is not visual; it is experiential. Food is centre stage. Angel Hill Food Co. is about fresh ingredients, freshly prepared food, and menus that change and evolve.

Food plays a much wider role in people’s lives than simply sustenance. It brings people together, marks occasions, reflects culture, and creates moments of connection. That belief underpins the strapline ‘For the Love of Food’. It is a simple expression of why the offer exists and of the teams that deliver every day.

Customers should see food that looks appealing, tastes good, and is prepared with care, using responsibly sourced ingredients. The branding supports that story, but the proof sits on the counter.

How important are people in bringing the brand to life?

People are fundamental. Frontline colleagues are the face of the business. They interact with customers every day, they understand local preferences, and they shape the experience far more than any brand asset ever could.

The focus is always on having the right people in place. When colleagues share the right values, skills can be taught, and knowledge can be developed. That means investing in training, support, and the tools that make it easier to deliver great food and great service.

There is a simple truth behind the model. Great food leads to happy customers. Happy customers lead to strong customer relationships. None of that happens without colleagues who care about what they do.

How are teams empowered while maintaining consistency and safety?

Food safety and allergens are non-negotiable. Those standards create clear boundaries. Within them, colleagues are trusted to apply their local knowledge.

What works in Scotland may not work in Cornwall. Preferences vary by region, site, and customer group. Teams understand that detail better than anyone and are encouraged to adapt menus within agreed frameworks. That balance between consistency and empowerment is essential to delivering a safe, relevant, and engaging food offer.

What makes Angel Hill Food Co. different in a crowded catering market?

Angel Hill Food Co. benefits from being part of OCS while retaining the agility of a specialist catering business. That combination matters.

The business operates with the flexibility and responsiveness often associated with smaller operators, while drawing on the scale, resources, and support of a wider facilities management group. This allows Angel Hill Food Co. to work successfully as a standalone catering partner or as part of a broader, integrated offer.

For customers, it means access to a catering brand that feels personal and focused, but is backed by resilience, governance, and long-term capability.

What do you want customers and colleagues to feel when they experience the brand?

For customers, the experience should feel personal. Catering is the one service on-site people actively choose and pay for, which makes quality and value highly visible.

When people see the Angel Hill Food Co. name, they should associate it with fresh food, great service and food crafted with care and purpose. That means menus shaped with nutrition in mind – not as an add-on, but as part of how food supports people through their day, whether they’re working, learning or delivering essential services.

For colleagues, the brand should feel inclusive and supportive. Investment in training, development, and tools helps teams feel included in a greater entity, even when they are geographically distant from the head office. That sense of being part of a team directly influences consistency and pride in delivery.

How will the brand continue to develop over time?

Consistency matters as much as creativity. The ambition is not to have peaks and troughs, but to deliver a steadily improving service. New concepts, chef development, and menu evolution are all part of that journey, designed to keep customers engaged day after day.

Feedback from sites already shows growing confidence in the offer and stronger customer response. That momentum comes from clarity of purpose and having the right people delivering it. Retaining existing partnerships and earning new ones flows naturally from doing the basics well, every day.

Angel Hill Food Co.’s relaunch is about reaffirming a simple idea: when food is prepared with care by people who are supported and trusted, it creates better experiences for everyone.

How Digital Innovation is Transforming the Food Experience

How Technology Is Changing the Way People Choose, Order and Experience Food at Work

Digital Innovation is reshaping how people interact with food every day – from the moment they browse a menu to the way they order, enjoy and engage with food onsite. As customer expectations evolve, technology is becoming a core part of catering offers that are more convenient, personalised and sustainable.

Across workplace environments, where time is precious and preferences are diverse, Digital Innovation is helping food services work smarter – giving people choice, reducing waste and freeing up onsite teams to focus on what matters most: great food and warm human connection.

Bringing Technology and Taste Together

Changing expectations in the modern workplace have created a clear role for Digital Innovation in catering. People want seamless access to information, quicker service and more control over how they enjoy food – all of which technology can enable.

Robert Jessey, Operations Director at Angel Hill Food Co., explains that these shifts in customer behaviour drove the development of a bespoke app. “We noticed the drive for quicker access to products and a clearer visibility of service,” he says. The goal was not simply to digitise existing processes, but to create solutions that reflect how people already shop and eat in their everyday lives.

A Connected Digital Journey

The heart of this transformation lies in connectivity. The new platform brings menus, pre-ordering, dietary data and feedback together – creating one consolidated experience for customers.

Robert highlights how Digital Innovation has enabled smoother integration between systems: from point-of-sale infrastructure to real-time data sharing between tools and teams. This connected approach ensures that production planning, stock tracking and menu management are more accurate and efficient.

You need that connectivity… because it all talks to each other, enabling us to connect the dots between the data quicker, providing a faster and more effective solution to the customer.

Using Data to Shape Better Food Choices

One of the most powerful aspects of Digital Innovation is the insight it generates.

By analysing how and when customers interact with the service – from ordering patterns to dietary preferences – colleagues can tailor food offers based on real behaviour rather than assumptions. These insights are helping teams:

  • Understand peak ordering times

  • Identify menu favourites and under-performers

  • Adapt food offers to specific site trends

This data-led approach supports more accurate production planning and reduces waste by aligning preparation with what customers actually want – a true demonstration of tech supporting sustainability.

Keeping the Human Touch at the Centre

Digital Innovation isn’t about replacing people – it’s about enhancing their ability to deliver excellent food experiences.

With routine tasks streamlined, colleagues spend less time managing queues and transactions, and more time engaging with customers personally. Whether answering questions, sharing recommendations or catering to individual dietary needs, the human element remains at the core of service.

Robert observes that, even amid digital transformation, people still seek connection with real colleagues – a reminder that technology should support, not replace, human interaction.

Angel Hill Food Co Chef

What Comes Next in Digital Innovation

Looking ahead, the potential for Digital Innovation continues to expand.

Robert sees opportunities for artificial intelligence to drive the next wave of transformation – from more personalised menu forecasting to tools that automatically tailor options based on allergens or sustainability criteria. Pilot programmes exploring AI-enabled food scanning and nutritional tracking are already underway.

He summarises the impact succinctly:

It makes things more convenient, sustainable and adds to the customer experience.

A Continuing Journey of Innovation

Digital Innovation is redefining how people choose, enjoy and connect over food. It supports better experiences by simplifying processes, deepening insight and enhancing the personal elements of service — all while keeping sustainability and relevance at the forefront.

As technology evolves, so too will the ways food is delivered, enjoyed and shaped by the people who eat it. What stays constant is this: innovation should always serve people, not just processes.

Innovation on the Plate: A Conversation with Chris Ince, Chef Director

Innovation has become a defining force in modern food service. As expectations rise across workplace dining, caterers are being challenged to deliver food that is creative, relevant, responsible and operationally sound. At Angel Hill Food Co., catering innovation is not a trend-driven exercise – it is a disciplined, collaborative approach to shaping the future of food at work.

We sat down with Chris Ince, Chef Director, to explore what innovation really means in today’s catering landscape, how ideas are brought to life, and how Angel Hill continues to innovate catering in ways that matter to customers and colleagues alike.

Chris, what does “innovation” actually mean in a catering context today?

Chris Ince:

For me, innovation in catering is about progress, not novelty. It’s easy to chase trends, but real innovation solves problems for customers and improves how food performs in a live environment. That might mean improving nutritional balance, reducing carbon impact, speeding up service, or making food more accessible to different audiences.

True catering innovation balances creativity with consistency. If an idea can’t be delivered at scale, or doesn’t resonate with customers, then it isn’t innovation – it’s just experimentation.

Where does innovation start at Angel Hill Food Co.?

Chris Ince:

It always starts with listening. We listen to our customers, our site teams and our chefs. They are closest to the reality of service – they know what customers ask for, what sells, and what causes friction.

From there, ideas are developed collaboratively. We test concepts in real kitchens, refine them based on feedback, and pressure-test them operationally. That process ensures we innovate catering in a way that works day in, day out – not just on paper.

How do you balance creativity with operational delivery at scale?

Chris Ince:

That’s one of the biggest challenges in food service. You can create the most exciting dish in the world, but if it slows service, requires specialist skills, or creates waste, it won’t succeed in a workplace setting.

Our approach to catering innovation is rooted in practicality. We look at ingredient availability, preparation time, training requirements and equipment from the outset. Creativity has to live within those parameters – and often that’s where the best ideas emerge.

Innovation is often associated with new flavours – but is that enough to deliver real progress in catering?

Chris Ince:

Flavours are important, but innovation goes far beyond that. Some of the most impactful changes happens quietly – reformulating recipes, improving sourcing, or redesigning formats to suit how people actually eat at work.

For example, improving a familiar dish by lowering its carbon footprint or enhancing its nutritional profile without changing the eating experience is a powerful way to innovate catering. Customers still get what they love, but with added value behind the scenes.

How does sustainability influence catering innovation across modern food service?

Chris Ince:

Sustainability is inseparable from innovation now. Any new concept or recipe has to be assessed through environmental, nutritional and commercial lenses. Our Big Carbon Kick Out programme is a great example – it challenges us to rethink everyday dishes and make smarter ingredient choices that reduce impact without sacrificing flavour.

This isn’t about telling customers what they should eat. It’s about making better choices the default, so sustainability becomes effortless.

How do you encourage chefs to innovate?

Chris Ince:

Culture is everything. Chefs need structure, but they also need trust. We give our teams clear frameworks and objectives, then empower them to explore ideas within those boundaries.

Initiatives like our Culinary Classroom bring chefs together to share knowledge, test concepts and learn from one another. When people feel invested and heard, innovation becomes part of everyday thinking – not something reserved for special projects.

What role does customer insight play in innovation?

Chris Ince:

A huge one. Innovation only succeeds if customers buy into it. That’s why we involve them early – through tastings, trials and feedback loops.

When customers help shape the outcome, adoption is faster and confidence is higher. That’s how we innovate catering with relevance, rather than assumption.

Looking ahead, what excites you most about the future of catering innovation?

Chris Ince:

The opportunity to rethink formats and experiences. As workplaces evolve, food needs to work harder – it has to be flexible, engaging and meaningful.

Whether it’s street-food-inspired concepts, smarter grab-and-go options, or reimagined classics, the future of catering innovation lies in blending creativity with insight. If we stay curious, collaborative and grounded in reality, there’s enormous potential ahead.

A Considered Approach to Innovating Catering

Innovation is not about reinvention for its own sake. It’s about thoughtful progress – improving how food tastes, how it’s delivered, and how it supports people and the planet.

By embedding catering innovation into everyday thinking and continuing to innovate catering through collaboration and insight, Angel Hill Food Co. is shaping a future where workplace food is not just served – it’s genuinely valued.

Shaping Better Food Experiences Through Nutrition

We believe food should do more than fuel the day. It should support wellbeing, productivity and enjoyment — wherever people work, learn or connect. That belief sits at the heart of our approach to Nutrition, Healthy Catering and Workplace Nutrition.

To bring this to life, we spoke with Amy Teichman, our Nutrition and Development Lead, about how Angel Hill Food Co. is reshaping food experiences through evidence-based nutrition, data-led insight and a deep understanding of how people eat today.

Why Nutrition Matters in Modern Catering

Nutrition is no longer a “nice to have”. Across workplaces, education settings and public-facing environments, people expect food that supports both physical and mental well-being – without compromising on taste.

Our role as a caterer has changed,” Amy explains.

“Customers don’t just want great food – they want reassurance. They want to know it’s balanced, responsibly sourced and aligned to how people actually live and work.

This shift has placed Healthy Catering at the centre of service design. From portion balance and ingredient quality to allergen transparency and dietary inclusion, nutrition now underpins every menu decision we make.

Amy Teichman – Head of Nutrition, Angel Hill Food Co.

Designing Healthy Catering Without Compromise

Healthy Catering shouldn’t feel restrictive or clinical. Our philosophy is simple: nutrition-led food that people genuinely want to eat.

Amy describes the approach as “quietly intentional”:

“We don’t shout about ‘healthy’ on every dish. Instead, we design menus where balance is built in – through cooking methods, recipe development and smart ingredient choices.”

This includes:

  • Naturally balanced menus with a focus on whole ingredients

  • Reduced reliance on ultra-processed foods

  • Thoughtful use of plant-forward dishes alongside quality proteins

  • Clear nutritional consideration without sacrificing flavour or comfort

The result is catering that feels indulgent, familiar and exciting – while still supporting healthier choices every day.

 

Workplace Nutrition: Supporting Performance, Not Just Appetite

The conversation around Workplace Nutrition has evolved rapidly. With hybrid working, changing shift patterns and increased focus on wellbeing, food now plays a critical role in how people perform at work.

“Food impacts energy, concentration and mood more than people realise,” Amy says.

“In workplace environments, nutrition isn’t about restriction – it’s about sustaining people through long days, varied shifts and high-pressure roles.”

Angel Hill Food Co. designs Workplace Nutrition strategies that reflect how different environments operate – from corporate offices and distribution centres to education and high-footfall locations.

This includes:

  • Menus that support sustained energy levels

  • Flexible food offers aligned to working patterns

  • Clear labelling to support informed choice

  • Data-led insights to refine menus over time

By aligning food to the realities of the workplace, we help customers create environments where people feel supported, not slowed down.

Angel Hill Chef

Turning Nutritional Insight Into Real-World Impact

What sets Angel Hill Food Co. apart is how nutrition translates into delivery. This isn’t theory – it’s practical, measurable and embedded into day-to-day operations.

Amy highlights the importance of collaboration:

“Nutrition works best when it’s integrated – with chefs, operations teams and customers all aligned. That’s how you move from policy to plate.”

Our teams work closely with customers to ensure nutrition supports wider goals, from wellbeing strategies to sustainability commitments and social value outcomes.

A Nutrition-Led Future for Food at Work

As expectations continue to rise, Angel Hill Food Co. remains committed to leading the way in Nutrition, Healthy Catering and Workplace Nutrition – creating food experiences that are thoughtful, inclusive and genuinely impactful.

Because when food is designed with care, backed by insight and delivered with passion, it does more than feed people.

It helps them thrive.

For the Love of Food: Celebrating Our Chefs on International Chef’s Day

Honouring the Passion, Creativity and Journeys Behind the Food We Serve Every Day

Every October 20th, kitchens across the globe mark International Chef’s Day, an annual celebration of the creativity, passion and dedication that chefs bring to their craft. First established in 2004 by the late Chef Dr. Bill Gallagher to honour the culinary profession and inspire future generations, International Chef’s Day is a global moment to recognise the people behind the plates – the professionals who transform everyday ingredients into memorable meals. 

We believe great food is more than just sustenance – it is connection, culture, and creativity brought to life through skill, curiosity and heart. This year’s International Chef’s Day gave us a chance to reflect on the stories and journeys of our own chefs whose passion fuels everything we do.

Passion That Started at Home

For many chefs, the joy of cooking begins long before formal training or professional accolades. For Chef Daisy Smith, it was family that sparked that flame.

“My love for food all came from my dad,” Daisy recalls. “He had me cooking with him from about three years old. He’s definitely my biggest inspiration and one of the reasons I wanted to get into catering in the first place.” Growing up, Daisy learned more than just recipes – she learned the rhythm of family kitchens, the joy of shared meals, and the creative freedom that comes with trying new flavours.

That early inspiration eventually became Daisy’s career. Today she brings that same warmth and adventurous spirit into her work, creating dishes that are rich in flavour and connection. Her story – from helping in the kitchen as a child to thriving as a professional chef – was shared as part of our TRUE Story series, where she highlighted how Angel Hill Food Co. has supported her growth and nurtured her talent.

Culinary Classroom

Daisy Smith – Chef, Business & Industry

Shannon Talbot-Bennett – Chef, Business & Industry

A Global Palette and Confidence on the Plate

For Shannon Talbot-Bennett, cooking is both a cultural expression and a way of connecting communities. Originally from South Africa, Shannon’s culinary journey began around barbecues with her family – a space where food was both celebration and tradition.

“Food was always part of how we connected,” she says. “Back home it was about outdoor cooking, shared meals and learning different ways of preparing food. Moving to the UK opened up even more opportunities to explore new cuisines and techniques.”

Shannon’s passion and skill have translated into experiences that blend her roots with a modern, global approach to food. Her achievements, including recognition at major food awards, reflect both confidence on the plate and a dedication to continuous culinary growth.

Tradition Meets Innovation

Chef Andre Alto brings a different perspective to the kitchen – one that marries tradition with innovation. For Andre, food was woven into family life from a young age, thanks to a household that valued curiosity at the table and encouraged trying everything placed in front of him.

“My mother and family were my first teachers,” Andre explains. “We were always encouraged to try new things. That curiosity has stayed with me throughout my career.”

Today, Andre channels that same spirit into his role as a Catering Manager, where he has transformed school kitchens into hubs of nutritional excellence and efficiency. His approach balances classic technique with thoughtful innovation, proving that great food can be both familiar and forward-looking.

Andre Alto – Chef, Education

Our Culinary Classroom 2024/2025 cohort

For the Love of Food

We believe that every dish our chefs craft carries meaning. Speaks to culture, memory, aspiration and care. From large-scale plated services to everyday meals in workplace dining spaces, our chefs bring joy and connection to every table they serve.

International Chef’s Day is more than a date on the calendar. It’s a reminder of the passion that shapes the food experience every day of the year. It’s a moment to celebrate those whose creativity elevates what we eat and enriches how we live.

To all the chefs – in our kitchens, in our communities and around the world – Happy International Chef’s Day. Thank you for your dedication, your stories, and the love you bring to food.

How Shannon Talbot Served Up Success at the StrEAT Food Awards 2025

Confidence, Culture and Craft Behind an Award Winning Street Food Moment

Winning an industry award is rarely about a single moment on the day. More often, it is the result of confidence built over time, inspiration drawn from personal experiences, and a clear belief in the food on the plate. For Chef Shannon Talbot, success at the StrEAT Food Awards 2025 was exactly that – a reflection of her journey as a chef, her cultural influences, and her thoughtful approach to street-food-inspired cooking.

Held at Big Penny Social in London, the StrEAT Food Awards bring together chefs from across the contract catering and street food sectors to showcase creativity, flavour and technical ability in a live competition environment. In her first year entering the awards, Shannon achieved an exceptional result – taking home StrEAT Food Chef of the Year and securing second place in the Dish of the Year category – a rare double recognition that underlines both skill and consistency.

Yet for Shannon, the experience was about more than trophies.

“I believed in the food I was putting forward, but I never expected to place first and second,” she says. “I went in wanting to challenge myself and prove that my ideas had a place on that stage.”

Cooking With Confidence and Intention

Shannon’s winning dish was a Caribbean-inspired jerk chicken taco, paired with a vibrant pineapple salsa and finished with delicate micro herbs. Inspired by the warmth and energy of Jamaican street food, the dish focused on bold, well-balanced flavours rather than complexity for complexity’s sake.

“I wanted to create something that felt approachable and exciting at the same time,” Shannon explains. “Street food should feel fun, full of flavour and easy to enjoy – not overworked.”

Judges praised the dish for its clarity, execution and confident flavour profile – a reflection of Shannon’s belief that strong ideas don’t need excessive embellishment to stand out.

“Sometimes less really is more,” she adds. “If the flavours are right, you don’t need to overcomplicate things.”

Drawing Inspiration From Heritage and Experience

Food has always been deeply personal for Shannon. Growing up, cooking was central to family life, with her father and brother playing key roles in shaping her relationship with food. Those early experiences continue to influence her cooking today, particularly her willingness to draw from cultural traditions and reinterpret them in modern ways.

Her second dish at the StrEAT Food Awards 2025 paid homage to her South African roots, reimagining the traditional bunny chow in a contemporary street-food format. The dish demonstrated both technical skill and storytelling – two qualities that have become hallmarks of Shannon’s style.

“I like food that has meaning behind it,” she says. “If a dish connects to who you are or where you come from, it naturally carries more confidence.”

Growth Through Challenge

That confidence was built well before the StrEAT Food Awards 2025. The year prior, Shannon was crowned OCS Chef of the Year, an internal competition celebrating culinary excellence, creativity and consistency across the business. The experience proved to be a pivotal moment, giving her the belief to push herself further and test her skills on a national stage.

“Winning OCS Chef of the Year made me realise I could trust my instincts,” Shannon reflects. “It gave me the confidence to take on bigger challenges and believe that my ideas had real value.”

That momentum carried directly into her preparation for the StrEAT Food Awards, where the same self-belief, clarity of flavour and calm approach under pressure helped set her apart from the competition.

Originally trained as a pastry chef, Shannon brings precision, patience and attention to detail into every dish she creates. That technical foundation has shaped her savoury cooking, particularly in fast-paced, high-pressure environments where balance, timing and execution are critical.

More Than an Award

Shannon Talbot’s success at the StrEAT Food Awards 2025 is a powerful example of how confidence, culture and creativity come together on the plate. It’s a reminder that great food doesn’t start with accolades – it starts with belief, intention and a genuine connection to the food being served.

For Shannon, the awards marked not an endpoint, but a moment of affirmation – proof that her voice, her flavour and her approach belong firmly within the evolving world of modern street-food-led catering.

Feeding Minds, Fuelling Futures: Why School Nutrition Matters More Than Ever

Food Setting the Foundation for Learning and Wellbeing

As the new academic year gets underway, millions of children across the UK are returning to classrooms with renewed energy and enthusiasm for learning. But before students can absorb that first lesson, answer that first question, or engage in that first group activity, they need something foundational: nutritious food that fuels their bodies and minds.

This is where school catering plays an undeniably critical role. In today’s increasingly challenging economic and social landscape, the food children eat at school is far more than a break in the day – it is part of their daily foundation for learning, health and long-term wellbeing.

The Link Between School Nutrition and Success

Robust evidence shows that well-balanced nutrition supports children’s ability to concentrate, retain information and regulate their behaviour in the classroom. Meals that include complex carbohydrates, protein, fibre and healthy fats help maintain stable blood sugar levels, giving students the sustained energy they need to stay alert and engaged throughout the school day. Conversely, poor nutrition – or starting the day without enough to eat – leads quickly to declining attention, low motivation, and even behavioural challenges that teachers and school leaders can see in real time. 

This insight underscores a simple but vital truth: nutrition drives learning. When a child is properly nourished, they are more receptive to instruction, better equipped for physical activity, and more ready to interact socially. This is the essential part of school life.

School Catering: A Frontline Nutritional Safety Net

For many children, school meals represent the most substantial and balanced portion of nutrition they receive in a day. In some cases, particularly for families under financial strain, these meals might be the most consistent source of nourishment available. As pressures on household budgets continue to rise across the UK, school catering companies have become an essential part of the safety net that supports families and ensures children don’t go hungry. 

This isn’t just about filling plates – it’s about providing meals that deliver essential nutrients and encourage positive eating habits. Opening students up to a broader range of flavours and foods they might not otherwise experience. Whether it’s introducing oily fish, pulses, a variety of vegetables, or seasonal fruit, the meals served have a long-term impact on dietary preferences and health outcomes.

Balancing Standards With Appeal

Meeting statutory school food standards is fundamental – but it’s not enough on its own. The real test of a successful school catering programme is whether children actually choose to eat what’s served. Achieving compliance with nutritional guidelines is one thing; making those meals appealing, tasty and engaging is another.

Working in partnership with schools, school catering companies are continuously innovating menus to strike that balance – ensuring dishes are packed with nutrients but also appealing to young tastes. This means carefully planning ingredients, experimenting with flavours, and creatively presenting food so students feel excited about what’s on offer. 

At the same time, rising food and labour costs pose ongoing challenges in maintaining variety and quality without passing those costs on. The expertise and commitment of experienced school catering teams make all the difference – helping schools navigate financial pressures without compromising on nutrition or taste.

A Collaborative Future for School Nutrition

Improving school nutrition and expanding the quality of school catering requires a collaborative effort – between schools, caterers, nutritionists, policymakers and families. Sustainable models that reflect contemporary dining habits and the diverse nutritional needs of children will help ensure all students are set up for success.

Investment in nutritious school food is far more than a line item in a budget: it’s an investment in our future – supporting cognitive development, promoting healthy habits and building resilience in the next generation. And as evidence grows around the links between school nutrition and both academic and long-term outcomes, the priority placed on quality school meals must remain high.

School Catering Companies: Partners in Learning

School catering companies are more than just food providers – they’re partners in education, health and community wellbeing. By delivering meals that nourish body and mind, they help create environments where children can flourish academically, socially and physically.

As we look ahead, one thing is clear: feeding young minds with nutritious food lays the groundwork for a brighter future – both inside and outside the classroom.

Culinary Classroom: Wrapping Up an Inspiring Year of Learning

This year’s Culinary Classroom has come to a memorable close, marking the end of an intensive and inspiring 10-month journey for ten chefs from Angel Hill Food Co. The programme culminated at the prestigious International Salon Culinaire, bringing together months of exploration, growth and hands-on experience that has broadened both culinary skills and professional perspectives. 

The Culinary Classroom is more than traditional training – it’s a transformative experience designed to deepen a chef’s understanding of food from every angle. Over the past year, participants have immersed themselves in a wide range of culinary disciplines, from sustainable vertical farming and low-carbon kitchen techniques to traditional craft skills such as bread-making and butchery. 

Each monthly module provided chefs with the opportunity to expand their knowledge and refine their craft in areas they may not encounter in day-to-day kitchen operations. This holistic approach not only strengthened technical skills, but also fostered a deeper appreciation of the journey food takes from farm to plate – an understanding that enriches both creativity and execution back in the kitchen.

AI in contract catering

Exploration, Immersion and Insight

A core strength of the Culinary Classroom is its combination of classroom learning and real-world application. Chefs participated in hands-on experiences at food roadshows and street food safaris across the UK, gaining first-hand exposure to food cultures, trends and supplier insights. These immersive experiences helped broaden perspectives on flavour, presentation and customer expectations – essential elements for any chef looking to innovate within modern catering. 

Importantly, the programme also built meaningful connections between chefs and suppliers. Through these interactions, participants learned about the passion and expertise behind quality ingredients and sustainable supply chains. Understanding a supplier’s craft nurtures respect for quality and drives better decision-making in menu development – a key focus of the Culinary Classroom experience.

Growing Skills Across the Board

Beyond practical techniques, the programme covered crucial aspects of professional growth. Modules led by Angel Hill Food Co.’s executive development team introduced robust training in menu planning, seasonal recipe development and even financial management – areas that equip chefs with the skills needed to think beyond the kitchen and understand the broader business of food service. By the end of the year, participants not only gained culinary depth but also essential business acumen that supports long-term success. 

Executive Development Chef, Matthew Vernon, reflected on the journey with pride:

Our Culinary Classroom chefs have been elevated within their profession and collaborative relationships have been nurtured. It’s been an incredible journey and a truly memorable class. I’m very proud of everyone and look forward to the reunion in 2026. It’s onwards and upwards for our chefs – exciting opportunities and competitions await in the future.

From Farm to Fork and Beyond

Participants gained deeper insights into the food ecosystem through visits that took them beyond standard kitchen walls. From mastering vertical farming techniques that maximise yield with minimal environmental impact to exploring how thoughtful ingredient selection influences flavour and sustainability, the Culinary Classroom emphasised that great cooking starts long before a dish hits the plate. 

Interaction with suppliers such as Syan Farm, which specialises in innovative protein solutions, and master butchers who provided expert technique sessions, highlighted the programme’s breadth and commitment to grounding chefs in real food knowledge – from field to fork.

A Future-Ready Culinary Community

As the curtain falls on this year’s Culinary Classroom, the growth and connections built by this cohort are clear. Participants return to their kitchens with a wider skill set, enriched confidence, and a fresh perspective on the craft of food. The programme stands as a testament to Angel Hill Food Co.’s commitment to Culinary Classroom learning – not just as a training initiative, but as a cornerstone of professional development and culinary excellence. 

With plans already in motion for next year’s expansion, the future looks bright for chefs who continue to push their craft, build community and champion creativity through lifelong learning.

Great Coffee, Greater Impact: How Angel Hill Food Co. Turns Everyday Choices into Positive Change

Great food and drink have always been about more than taste alone. They’re about people, purpose and the impact small, everyday choices can have when they’re made with care. That belief is perfectly reflected in the success of Groundhouse Coffee – a coffee brand that proves doing good can start with something as simple as the morning cup.

Over the past year, Groundhouse Coffee has helped raise more than £10,000 for charitable causes, demonstrating how Angel Hill Food Co. continues to weave social value into the fabric of its food and beverage offer. It’s a powerful reminder that when food is thoughtfully sourced and purposefully served, it can create meaningful change far beyond the counter.

Coffee with a conscience

Groundhouse Coffee was developed as part of Angel Hill Food Co.’s commitment to offering products that align with modern expectations — quality, sustainability and responsibility working hand in hand. From ethically sourced beans to a supply chain designed with transparency in mind, Groundhouse represents a conscious approach to coffee that doesn’t compromise on flavour or experience.

Every cup served across Angel Hill Food Co. sites contributes to wider charitable efforts, turning daily rituals into opportunities for positive impact. Rather than relying on one-off fundraising initiatives, the Groundhouse model embeds giving directly into everyday consumption – ensuring that impact is continuous, not occasional.

As Henry Watts, Managing Director at Angel Hill Food Co., explains:

Groundhouse Coffee shows how everyday choices can make a real difference. By building purpose into a product people enjoy daily, we’re able to create meaningful social impact without asking customers to change their behaviour — just enjoy great coffee.

That philosophy sits at the heart of the Groundhouse approach: doing good shouldn’t feel complicated, forced or separate from the food experience.

Small moments, collective impact

The £10,000 raised through Groundhouse Coffee didn’t come from a single campaign or event. It came from thousands of individual decisions – people choosing a coffee during a break, between meetings or at the start of their day. Collectively, those moments added up to something far more powerful.

For Angel Hill Food Co., that collective impact is central to the brand’s philosophy. Food and drink are touchpoints that connect people throughout the day, and when those touchpoints are designed with purpose, they become vehicles for change.

By embedding charitable giving into a core product, Angel Hill Food Co. ensures that doing good is effortless for customers. There’s no additional action required – just a great cup of coffee that happens to give back.

Supporting communities through food

Social value is not an add-on for Angel Hill Food Co.; it’s an integral part of how the business operates. Groundhouse Coffee sits alongside wider initiatives focused on sustainability, nutrition and community support, reinforcing a holistic approach to responsible catering.

The funds raised through Groundhouse have supported causes aligned with Angel Hill Food Co.’s values, helping communities and individuals in meaningful ways. While the coffee itself is the visible product, the real impact is felt in the lives supported behind the scenes.

This aligns closely with the wider mission of Angel Hill Food Co. – to deliver food that not only tastes good, but does good too. Whether through reducing environmental impact, supporting local suppliers or embedding charitable contributions into everyday menus, the focus remains on long-term, meaningful outcomes.

Purpose built into the plate – and the cup

What makes Groundhouse Coffee particularly powerful is its simplicity. There’s no grand gesture or complicated mechanism. Instead, it reflects a belief that purpose works best when it’s seamlessly integrated into everyday life.

For Angel Hill Food Co., this is the future of workplace catering – where quality, convenience and conscience coexist naturally. Customers don’t have to choose between enjoying great food and supporting positive change; they can do both, effortlessly.

As Groundhouse Coffee continues to grow across Angel Hill Food Co. locations, its impact will grow with it – one cup at a time. And while £10,000 is a significant milestone, it’s also just the beginning.

Because at Angel Hill Food Co., every choice matters – and even the smallest moments can help create a better, more sustainable future.

Celebrating Contract Catering Excellence: Our Colleagues Shortlisted for the 2025 Contract Catering Awards

Recognition within our industry is a powerful moment – not just for the individuals involved, but for the wider teams, customers and communities they serve. This year, as the sector came together to acknowledge outstanding talent and achievement, several of our colleagues were proudly shortlisted for the prestigious Contract Catering Awards 2025, underscoring the remarkable contribution they make to food service and hospitality each day. 

The Contract Catering Awards – formerly known as the FSM Awards – are widely regarded as one of the most esteemed celebrations in the UK’s contract catering calendar. Hosted annually in London, the awards recognise exceptional individuals and teams who have demonstrated excellence, innovation and leadership across a range of catering disciplines. 

This year’s ceremony took place on 3 March at Park Plaza Westminster Bridge, bringing together leaders, rising stars and innovators from across the industry to celebrate achievement, share insight and build community.

Recognising Outstanding Contributions

We are delighted to celebrate the accomplishments of the following colleagues who were shortlisted for the Contract Catering Awards 2025:

  • Robert Cass – Area Manager of the Year

  • Matt Chapman – Development Chef of the Year

  • Chef Andre Alto – Education Award, recognised for his innovative approach to catering and budgeting while enhancing service delivery at Kings Norton Girls School

These nominations reflect both individual excellence and the spirit of collaboration that defines our approach to food service. Each nominee has made a significant impact in their role, demonstrating professionalism, creativity and a relentless commitment to quality.

Matt Chapman, Development Chef

Andre Alto, Chef

Robert Cass, Area Manager

What the Contract Catering Awards Mean

The Contract Catering Awards are unique in their focus and reach. As the only event dedicated exclusively to celebrating achievements within the contract catering sector, they draw attention to both the people and the service excellence that drive the industry forward. Categories span from operational leadership and culinary creativity to education, people development and sustainability, highlighting the depth and diversity of talent across the sector. 

For nominees and finalists alike, being shortlisted is a meaningful acknowledgement – one that reflects hard work, ingenuity and the everyday commitment to elevating the catering experience for clients and customers.

A Night of Celebration

The awards ceremony itself is more than just a recognition event; it’s a celebration of community. Industry professionals from across the UK gather to reconnect with peers, celebrate achievements and share inspiration for the year ahead. From rising stars to seasoned leaders, the evening brings together voices and stories that together shape the contract catering landscape. 

As the night unfolded, 16 different awards were presented, each honouring outstanding contributions in areas such as leadership, innovation, education, operational excellence and culinary achievement. The breadth of categories underscores just how expansive and dynamic the sector has become, and how many different skills and talents contribute to its ongoing success.

Looking Ahead

Being shortlisted for a Contract Catering Awards category is a milestone that celebrates individual success and highlights the strength of teamwork and mentorship. It also sets a benchmark for future performance, inspiring colleagues to continue striving for excellence in every aspect of their work.

We are incredibly proud of Robert, Matt and Andre – not only for their nominations but for the professionalism and enthusiasm they bring to their roles every day. Their achievements remind us that recognition matters, not just as a career highlight, but as a shared affirmation of purpose and passion within our industry.

As the sector continues to evolve, events like the Contract Catering Awards play a vital role in championing the people who are shaping its future. Congratulations to all nominees – and here’s to many more moments of celebration and achievement across the world of contract catering.