providing food

This page explains the requirement to provide healthy food to participants in Fit for All sessions which are funded through Bring it on Brum using the Holiday Activities and Food fund. It sets out the rules and standards that are involved. And it explains the three options you have in relation to food provision: do-it-yourself; work with a local food partner; or work with one of the central food providers through either Fit for All or Bring it On Brum!

If you provide HAF-funded sessions as part of Fit for All, you should serve participants at least one meal during each session and a snack. For most groups providing HAF-funded sessions this will be a question of working with a local food partner or providing food from your own kitchens etc. Fit for All, however, includes children with a wide range of special needs alongside other vulnerable children and children and young people who are eligible for Free School Meals (FSM). There may be times when serving a meal is either not practical, or not the best way of meeting the aims of the HAF scheme. If you are in this position, you should still read this guidance; and work with Children’s Quarter (who coordinate Fit for All) to develop a proposal that will most nearly fit with what is intended.

In this section:

what kind of meal should be provided

customisation: equal but different

food hygiene and allergy awareness

sample menu

adding value through food activities

who provides the food – three options

registering as a food business.

What kind of meal should be provided?

You can provide breakfast, lunch or an evening meal – whatever is most appropriate given the timing of your sessions. There is an aspiration that providers should try to offer hot meals to participants.  However, we understand that this is not always practical.  Alternatives to hot plated meals – including cold plated meals; buffet meals; and packed lunches – may all be appropriate alternatives depending on circumstances. 

As well as a meal, Fit for All providers should provide participants with a healthy snack. All food provided at holiday clubs (including snacks) must meet school food standards. Some general rules apply:

  • All food must be stored appropriately and at the correct temperature.
  • Drinking water should be available and easily accessible throughout every session.
  • There should be no serving of fizzy drinks or drinks with added sugar (no added sugar dilute squashes etc are acceptable).
  • No fried food can be served.
  • Meals and snacks must meet at least 2 portions of a child’s 5 a-day of fruit and vegetables.
  • Amounts of fat, salt & sugar should be limited.
  • Attention to correct portion size should be exercised.
  • Children with allergies must be safeguarded when eating food provided.
  • Food and meals provided should be ethnically sensitive, evidence cultural awareness and must allow sufficient customisation in order to meet the food and eating requirements of the children and young part you have taking part.

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Customisation: Equal but Different

There is an expectation that participants in a HAF-funded session should have an identical food offer.  The aim is clear: to treat participants equally.  In particular, if there is a mix of paying and FSM participants, the children who are entitled to FSM must be treated the same as children who are paying for meals.  We understand, however, that young people – and those with SEND in particular – can have particular food and eating requirements, habits, intolerances and preferences. 

Food and eating forms an important part of each session and healthy nutrition is a key part of what HAF aims to achieve.  Meals and mealtimes should therefore be customised to meet the needs of participants.  That includes where those needs are related to participants’ SEND and where they are related to religious faith and cultural factors.  Inclusive practice is based on treating participants equally, by serving them differently.

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Food Hygiene and Allergy Awareness

All food provided as part of HAF funded projects must comply with regulations on food preparation and food hygiene.  It must take into account general and individual dietary requirements including guidance on food allergies.  Bring it On Brum! provides links for Food Hygiene training and links to Allergy Awareness training for HAF-funded projects in Birmingham. Fit for All will keep you updated about these opportunities and you can check them out yourself at the Bring it On Brum Free Training Site.

Food Allergy training also available at the Food Standards Agency’s Free Online Food Safety Training site.

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Sample Menu

Groups that provide HAF-funded Fit for All sessions have to produce a sample menu showing how they will feed participants before each seasonal delivery: Easter, Summer and Winter. The sample menu gives an idea of your approach to food provision. It needs to be supplied to Bring It On Brum via Children’s Quarter.

Bring It On Brum produce a template for sample menus which should be used – it’s available here to download as a Word document.

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Adding value through food activities

Making and serving meals on site can provide an opportunity to engage participants (and their families) in food preparation and nutritional education.  If children are involved in designing menus and the preparation of meals, they are more engaged and may be more willing to try new and healthier food.  Customising food to the requirements and habits of participants should be done in such a way as to create opportunities for experimentation by participants.  Fit for All projects have had repeated successes in enabling children and young people to extend beneficially their food and eating choices and tolerances.   HAF funded sessions can be valuable alternative settings for meals that are away from the family or school.  Sometimes it is easier to try out new things away from the people we normally eat with.

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Who provides the food – the three options

If you deliver HAF-funded sessions as part of Fit for All, then you have three options in relation to supplying food.  You can:

  1. Provide food yourself (providing food includes preparing or  cooking it, but it also means storing, handling and serving it for example) – if you take this option you will have to register as a food business.
  2. Work with a local food partner – eg a school, catering business, restaurant, shop, café or community kitchen which is registered as a food business and is, therefore, subject to inspection and enforcement by the Council’s environmental health service.
  3. Work with one of the food partners in the Fit for All scheme or the central food provider for Bring it On Brum – these are registered food providers who are able to provide food at your location at the unit food cost funded by HAF.

If you take option 1 or 2 then the £5/head food allowance will come to you.  Your organisation, or the food partner you work with will be responsible for the legal, insurance, regulatory and food requirements of the HAF scheme and will have to be registered as a food business.  Registration as a food business provides reassurance to those involved that food safety standards are being met.

If you take option 3 then the £5/head food allowance will go direct to the food partner.  In return they will provide a meal and snack that meets the standards required and will be liable for meeting all the legal, insurance, regulatory and food requirements.

If you prepare your own food or work with a local food partner, you will need to provide before the start of each holiday delivery:

  • The menu you will serve demonstrating how meals meet school food standards
  • Details of the kitchen facilities you will use, ensuring they are registered with Birmingham City Council
  • Confirmation of the latest food hygiene rating for the kitchen. Food hygiene ratings must be
  • 4 or 5 in order for the food partner to be eligible to provide food for holiday programmes
  • The relevant insurance information relating to providing food onsite
  • Evidence of staff training for Level 2 Food Hygiene
  • Evidence of staff training for Allergy Awareness.

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Registering as a Food Business

A food business is defined as anyone preparing, cooking, storing, handling, distributing, supplying or selling food. ‘Food businesses’ include:

  • catering businesses run from home, mobile catering and temporary businesses;
  • non-profit enterprises, charities and sole traders as well as companies and larger organisations
  • organisations that store or deliver food as well as those which prepare and serve food
  • schools, nurseries and community groups etc whose main work is something other than food as well as companies who specialise in food supply. (There are special arrangements for registered child-minders which are the responsibility of the local council).

You have to register as a food business at least 28 days before you start handling food. Once registered, you may be inspected by the local authority. Registration is free. You can be fined or sent to prison if you run a food business without being registered.

There is further information about Food Business Registration on the gov.uk site

The Food Standards Agency produces a guide to registering as a food business.

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