The pair were both presented with the Culinary Experience Grand Prize.
Representing Sodexo UK and Ireland, Sharon said: “The standard was very high and I was a little nervous, but I’m used to preparing food under pressure and I put in a lot of practice beforehand so once the competition began, the nerves fell away.
“Even back at school I felt most at home in the kitchen, so a career in catering was always on the cards. I joined Sodexo as a food service assistant 15 years ago and worked my way up.
“I hate wasting anything, particularly food, so I’ve always tried to keep it down. Volunteering with FareShare, which redistributes food to communities that need it, keeps me vigilant.
“But then you learn about the connection between food waste and climate change, and it fires you up even more.
“I was delighted to have had the opportunity to work with such talented people, united by a common purpose, paving the way for tasty and sustainable food.”
On a stage, against the clock and under the watchful eye of a panel of experts that included the German three-Michelin star chef Thomas Bühner, Sharon impressed the judges with a gluten-free, vegan-friendly pistachio-crusted celeriac steak, followed by a vegan chocolate mousse with a honeycomb and coconut ice cream.
As well as using low carbon ingredients, Sharon also ensured her dishes minimised food waste.
Charles Abraham, director of food platform at Sodexo UK & Ireland said: “It is fantastic that Sharon has been recognised as joint winner in our global sustainable chef competition – it showcases her ability and skills but also her commitment to sustainable eating.
“At Sodexo, we have a key role in positively impacting change to what people eat every day and how this impacts the environment and with chefs like Sharon championing this, it demonstrates the progress we are making and also that you have can great tasting, low-carbon dishes.”
Sharon faced seven other Sodexo chefs from Brazil, Chile, France, Germany, India, United Arab Emirates and the US in a live cook-off in Germany on November 15th. They were required to produce two delicious, low-carbon, sustainable yet practical dishes that minimised food waste.
Sodexo has a goal that 70% of its main dishes can be labelled ‘low carbon’ by 2030.