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Craft Guild of Chefs Chairman's Charity Dinner raises over £10,000

17th Mar 2025 - 05:00
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Craft Guild of Chefs Chairman's Charity Dinner raises over £10,000
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In total £10,193 was raised for the Down’s Syndrome Association (DSA) at the Craft Guild of Chefs Chairman’s Charity Dinner on 6th March 2025.

This was the first time the Craft Guild of Chefs had selected the Down’s Syndrome Association as the charity they wish to support at the Chairman’s Dinner. A signed Chelsea Football Club shirt was purchased for £1,000.

The dinner was attended by over 100 chefs and food industry colleagues who are members of the Craft of Guild of Chefs, and their generosity led to the significant amount of money raised to support people who have Down’s syndrome. 

The menu for the dinner was created by an industry leading brigade of chefs:

  • Starter, chef Nicole Benham-Corlette from Tugo: poached hens egg, hollandaise and confit baby leeks
  • Fish course, 2022 National Chef of the Year winner Ben Murphy: turbot, courgette and vin jaune
  • Main course, 2013 National Chef of the Year winner Hayden Groves: sirloin and braised shin of black angus beef, roscoff onion, roasted Jerusalem artichoke and red wine jus
  • Dessert: chef Roger Pizey from Fortnum & Mason: lemon tart

Andrew Green, chief executive of the Craft Guild of Chefs, said: “With a room full of generous people from our hospitality sector, we always knew that we would raise both a good amount of money, but, so importantly awareness. Getting these young people into our industry is so very important to us.

“Seeing our chairman Mark Reynolds embrace this by leading the way in this dinner, but also by employing someone who has Downs syndrome is a testament to all that we say and do.” 

The DSA has worked alongside the Craft Guild of Chefs since 2022, through the DSA’s innovative employment programme WorkFit that brings together employers and jobseekers who have Down’s syndrome. 

The partnership with the Craft Guild of Chefs has resulted in sustainable employment opportunities for young people who have Down’s syndrome in the hospitality sector, including a role as an apprentice chef for a young person at Tottenham Hotspur Football Club. 

Four WorkFit candidates who work in the food industry in permanent paid jobs attended the event with two cooking in the kitchen (Harry and Brogan) and two serving guests in front of house roles (Hanaa and Alban). 

Written by
Edward Waddell