Like any large-scale events company, our catering arm Jockey Club Catering produces a large amount of high-quality food and drink each year, from our three large racing festivals to weekday racing and thousands of conference and events that are held at our venues. One of our biggest challenges is to reduce food waste where possible. If there has been a race day abandonment due to adverse weather conditions where the food cannot be used for another event, or we don’t get the numbers we were expecting, a huge amount of good food is at risk of ending up as food waste.
When there are hungry people in the world and scarce natural resources, to me this is just unacceptable. So, we started reaching out to local charities to see if they could benefit from our surplus food. It happened organically at first and has grown into a network of over fifteen charities nationwide that regularly accept and re-use our surplus food for people who need it.
In addition to this, our culinary teams work hard to produce dishes with ingredients from local suppliers who share our vision to become leaders in sustainability. We aim for 100 per cent of ingredients on our menus to be British and seasonal and where possible focus on plant-based options. On every menu that is produced from The Jockey Club, we have teamed up with Foodsteps to analyse the environmental impact of our menus. The carbon labels display the carbon footprint per serving of each item, which refers to the greenhouse gas emissions released from farm to waste so that our customers can make more conscious choices.
Many of our racecourse teams have gone even further and are producing their own fresh ingredients on site. Two examples of this are Haydock Park and Epsom Downs. Haydock Park has an area of racecourse that has been utilised as an Orchard with apple and pear trees where the produce is used in menus throughout the year. In January 2024, Epsom Downs built and created a garden in an unused area of their racecourse with the vision to use the home-grown herbs and vegetables in menus at our race days. Fast forward to May 2024, and the garden has produced mint, parsley, radish, mange tout, carrots, thyme, sage and peas which was used in a variety of dishes across the Betfred Derby Festival at the beginning of the month.