Eating Together
The Food Programme
BBC
4.4 • 976 Ratings
🗓️ 20 February 2026
⏱️ 44 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
A year after sharing a £10 supper with 200 strangers in Copenhagen’s Absalon - an old church turned community hub - Sheila asks whether that experience could be recreated in the UK. After all, communal meals here are often one-offs, sometimes pricey, or feel like generous soup kitchens.
In this edition, Sheila meets people determined to change that; Ingrid Wakeling and Phil Holtam from Sussex Surplus are running trial communal dining events in Brighton, using surplus food to bring strangers together. Anna Chworow from Nourish Scotland is helping shape two pilot public diners - subsidised, everyday restaurants designed for everyone, while Jon Harper from Future Foundations explains how CanTeam is turning school canteens into community dining rooms.
Sheila also visits The Long Table in Stroud - a pay-what-you-can community restaurant - to meet co-founder Tom Herbert, and is joined there by zero‑waste chef Max La Manna and Carly Trisk‑Grove from The Public Plate, who want every community to have their own low‑cost restaurant. Together, they discuss what it would take to make their dreams reality - and why they believe it matters.
Presented by Sheila Dillon Produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Natalie Donovan.
More info:
Communal Dining -Part 1: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0028l2c The Long Table: https://thelongtableonline.com/ The Public Plate (Carly Trisk-Grove's project): https://www.thepublicplate.com/about Nourish Scotland project: https://www.nourishscotland.org/projects/public-diners/ Right to Food Commission (Ian Byrne MP's project): https://www.ianbyrne.org/rtfcommission Sussex Surplus (Brighton): https://www.sussexsurplus.org/ CanTeam: http://www.canteam.org/
NB: Be aware these links take you to external non-BBC websites.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | BBC Sounds, Music, radio, podcasts. |
| 0:07.0 | In 2019, we began investigating the disappearance of Dr. Ruzha Ignatva. |
| 0:14.0 | I believe we are a very special network. |
| 0:16.0 | A scammer who stole billions from investors around the world. |
| 0:21.4 | She's on the FBI's 10 most wanted list. |
| 0:24.5 | And now we have some unmissable updates. |
| 0:27.8 | She has money, and when you have money, you have power. |
| 0:30.6 | Join me, Jamie Bartlett, as the hunt for the missing crypto queen continues. |
| 0:35.5 | Listen first on BBC Sounds. |
| 0:41.1 | Hello, I'm Sheila Dillon and this is the food programme. When you live in a society where money seems to be the measure of everything, how do you |
| 0:47.3 | connect again to what's human, what's really valuable? Well, breaking bread together seems to me |
| 0:54.6 | one powerful way, |
| 0:56.6 | which is what's engaging us |
| 0:58.4 | in this edition. |
| 1:04.4 | This time, last year, |
| 1:06.1 | I was in Copenhagen |
| 1:07.2 | for a midweek meal inside an old church. |
| 1:13.6 | Trying to hum along to the Danish version |
| 1:16.6 | of Happy Birthday. |
| 1:26.6 | The deconsecrated church is now called Absalom, a place where every night around 200 people eat together. |
| 1:33.2 | Long wooden tables, strangers shoulder to shoulder, families, pensioners, students. |
| 1:39.0 | All sharing the same dishes at the same time for around 10 pounds each. |
... |
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