Kuwait Times

Wimbledon cancellati­on gives food for thought

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LONDON: Strawberri­es and cream are just as much part of the Wimbledon experience as tennis in pristine whites on the lush green lawns of the All England Club. But this year the courts are empty and there is no clink of cutlery on plates in the rarefied surroundin­gs of the London venue. AFP Sport spoke to two people at the core of the catering operation who have had to adapt after the coronaviru­s pandemic forced the cancellati­on of the tournament, with the men’s and women’s singles finals having been originally scheduled for this weekend.

STRAWBERRY FIELDS FOREVER

The 30 tonnes of strawberri­es usually consumed at Wimbledon — picked on the morning of each day’s play — have not gone to waste. Hugh Lowe Farms in nearby Kent has been the sole supplier for the championsh­ips for the past 27 years. A portion of a minimum of 10 strawberri­es cost £2.50 ($3.10) last year. But the team, including star picker Katya Busheva, has not been kicking its heels because there has been no tennis. “The days of the English strawberry season that you blink and miss it have gone many years ago,” Marion Regan, owner of Hugh Lowe Farms, told AFP.

“The strawberry season runs from April until November and we have a glasshouse for each end of the season. “Wimbledon and strawberri­es are so

closely associated with the summer and I cannot stress more how important the 30 tonnes in two weeks (they sell 5,000 tonnes a year) is to us.”

Regan, whose family farm has been producing strawberri­es since Victorian times, said the “quintessen­tial English fruit” has the ability to transform people’s moods. “One of the people who works in the events team told me they (Wimbledon) are preparing strawberri­es for key workers.

“We have also supplied local schools who stayed open for children of key workers and one or two food bank arrangemen­ts supporting vulnerable families. “Eating strawberri­es brings a smile to people’s faces — we are trying to make as many people smile as possible.” Regan, whose daughter is the fifth generation of the family to become involved in the business, says she is enjoying a different type of sporting action. “Katya is here for her eighth season from Bulgaria and averages 50 kilos in an hour,” she said. “I see parallels between the pickers and athletes. Efficient and good strawberry pickers do treat it like a sport.”

COOKING UP A STORM

Instead of overseeing hundreds of staff, Wimbledon’s executive chef Adam Fargin is providing adapted “signature Wimbledon dishes” for 200 members of the local community five days a week.

“We are doing dishes such as Coronation chicken, which is a classic at Wimbledon,” he said. “We are doing some other dishes like teriyaki poached salmon. “We take elements of the signature dish — it would normally be poached salmon — but we do it in a different way to suit the local community. “Wimbledon being a summer event, a lot of our signature dishes are cold so we have had to try and reinvent them for the project so they can reheat those.” — AFP

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