Western Mail

Butcher gives his rivals the chop in contest

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Craig Holly, assistant manager of Neil Powell Butchers in Abergavenn­y, has been named Welsh Butcher of the Year.

Mr Holly, 29, added the coveted title to his list of honours, which include Welsh Pork Butcher of the Year in 2016, following a keenly contested final at the Royal Welsh Winter Fair in Builth Wells.

Just a few points separated the three butchers in the high-scoring final. Chris Lewis, from Filco Foods, Llantwit Major, and Jon Whittingto­n, a freelance butcher from Welshpool, a late replacemen­t for defending champion Dan Allen-Raftery, from Randall Parker Foods, Llanidloes, were runnersup. Both Lewis and Whittingto­n made impressive competitio­n debuts.

After being beaten by Allen-Raftery last year and being runner-up in the recent Butchery WorldSkill­s UK final in Birmingham, Mr Holly was delighted to be named champion. He said: “I am extremely happy to have won the competitio­n. It was a close competitio­n and I thought the displays by other two butchers were really nice. They had some very good ideas.”

Despite competing in the Butchery WorldSkill­s UK final less than two weeks ago, he completely changed his products for the Welsh Butcher of the Year.

Mr Holly explained: “I didn’t want to go into the competitio­n to do something that I had already done. I prefer to challenge myself and everything I did was completely new. Competing at WorldSkill­s UK has made me a lot cleaner as a butcher and I take more care with trimming bones. It has also given me the confidence to try new ideas.

“I now plan to work hard to get through to the WorldSkill­s final again next year. My ambition is to travel and to be involved in new product developmen­t as a butcher.

“Everyone has seen how to bone out a shoulder of lamb, but I want to come up with different ideas that show butchery as a craft. A younger audience wants new products that they haven’t seen before.

“I try to do something different with labelling, naming products after movies from the ‘80s and ‘90s, such Lamb Shank Redemption and Reservoir Hogs.”

Sponsored by Cambrian Training Company, Hybu Cig Cymru/ Meat Promotion Wales and the Royal Welsh Agricultur­al Society, the Welsh Butcher of the Year competitio­n is an important stepping stone to UK-wide competitio­ns.

Mr Holly will now have the opportunit­y to follow in the footsteps of talented butchers like Peter Rushforth and Matthew Edwards, who both represente­d the UK and won the Butchery WorldSkill­s UK final.

Chris Jones, head of the food and drink business unit at Cambrian Training Company, praised all three finalists: “It was a very high-scoring final and all three butchers had a good work ethos – clean, tidy, methodical and skilful.

“You would never have known that it was Chris and Jon’s first competitio­n. They looked like seasoned profession­als and it was a really good, close final.”

The finalists faced a true test of their butchery skills over three tasks in front of an audience in the Cambrian Training Pavilion at the Royal Welsh Showground.

They were given an hour to seam a leg of pork, 70 minutes to create kitchen-ready products for customers from a mystery box of ingredient­s and 90 minutes to create a visually exciting barbecue meat display using a whole chicken, topside of Welsh beef, leg of Welsh lamb and topside of pork.

 ??  ?? > Welsh Butcher of the Year Craig Holly
> Welsh Butcher of the Year Craig Holly

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