4.4 • 943 Ratings
🗓️ 9 May 2025
⏱️ 44 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
With the Government pledging to overhaul the way food is sourced for public institutions like hospitals, schools, prisons, and army bases, Sheila Dillon explores how these changes could be implemented and why they are deemed essential by many.
Sheila visits St Peter’s Hospital in Chertsey, Surrey, where chef Raouf Mansour has transformed the canteen for staff and visitors. After bringing the operation in-house post-Covid, the hospital began collaborating with local suppliers to provide fresh, seasonal produce. Raouf emphasises that retraining chefs to prepare nutritious, mezze-style meals has been crucial in encouraging staff to dine at the restaurant. The hospital is also working on plans to revamp patient meals, which are all prepared off-site, by working with smaller local caterers who can better meet some of the specific needs of patients there.
Following her visit, Sheila returns to the studio to discuss whether the changes in Chertsey could signal a broader trend. She is joined by:
Kevin Morgan, Professor of Governance and Development at Cardiff University and author of "Serving the Public: The Good Food Revolution in Schools, Hospitals, and Prisons" Kath Dalmeny, Chief Executive of Sustain Katie Palmer from Food Sense Wales, who is working on the Welsh Veg in Schools Project Derek Wright from Blackpool Catering Services, which has expanded its school meal provision over the past five years, with on-site chefs and locally sourced produce.
Presented by Sheila Dillon Produced in Bristol for BBC Audio by Natalie Donovan
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0:00.0 | Before you listen to this BBC podcast, I'd like to introduce myself. |
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0:42.3 | So this is the main course is we've done it in Mediterranean styles, North African styles. |
0:46.3 | You get a lot of like, it's a mezzar style, so you can make your own if you're not sure what you want. |
0:52.3 | I'm standing in line for lunch with chef Raouf Mansour, |
0:56.6 | who designed and runs this large, brightly sunlit canteen. |
1:01.9 | On one side, there are salads set out in big, colourful ceramic dishes, |
1:07.1 | greens and bulgar wheat, broccoli, red cabbage, grated carrots, chickpeas, all of them |
1:13.6 | perked up with fresh herbs. There are glass jars of pickles and several different dressings. |
1:19.6 | On the other side, the hot dishes served by the chefs who cooked them. |
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