sean owens – Licensed & Catering News (LCN) – News Coverage from the Local Trade https://lcnonline.co.uk An Online Resource and Voice for the Industry and Key Decision Makers Wed, 23 Mar 2022 15:05:37 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://lcnonline.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/cropped-LCN-Icon-32x32.png sean owens – Licensed & Catering News (LCN) – News Coverage from the Local Trade https://lcnonline.co.uk 32 32 Michael Deane to officially open IFEX as event gets set to welcome 6,000 visitors https://lcnonline.co.uk/michael-deane-to-officially-open-ifex-as-event-gets-set-to-welcome-6000-visitors/ Wed, 23 Mar 2022 15:05:37 +0000 https://lcnonline.co.uk/?p=18519 Next week, Northern Ireland’s premier food, drink, retail and hospitality event – IFEX 2022 – will open its doors at the Titanic Exhibition Centre, Belfast.

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Next week, Northern Ireland’s premier food, drink, retail and hospitality event – IFEX 2022 – will open its doors at the Titanic Exhibition Centre, Belfast.

Taking place from Tuesday 29 to Thursday 31 March, approximately 6,000 industry professionals are expected to attend IFEX, where more than 150 suppliers and manufacturers will be showcasing the latest products and services in the industry. Registration for the free-to-attend show is now open.

Marking the show’s 25th edition, restaurateur Michael Deane – who was the first-ever winner of Chef of the Year – will officially open the show, which will also be home to over 250 industry and student chefs who will descend on the Salon Culinaire at IFEX, making it Northern Ireland’s largest and most prestigious culinary competition.

Featuring a jam-packed schedule of culinary competitions, two of the most hotly contended accolades are the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs-supported IFEX Northern Ireland Chef of the Year and Northern Ireland Junior Chef of the Year competitions.

Reinforcing the importance of IFEX’s Salon Culinaire to the hospitality industry, Michael Deane says: “IFEX is a chance for all chefs – both from industry and education – to benchmark their skills against the best. It’s imperative to our industry that we compete both on skills and with our incredible produce therefore IFEX is instrumental in helping young chefs to raise their game.

“It’s where I first earned my stripes and winning Chef of the Year brought considerable publicity to my first venture in Helen’s Bay, Deanes on the Square. Today, we encourage many of our chefs at Deanes to enter the various competition as it’s hugely beneficial in terms of upskilling, instilling confidence and learning from peers.”

In addition to the ChefSkills Live Theatre at Salon Culinaire, there’s Street Food International and Edible Art competitions.

Organisers are confident that IFEX will demonstrate how business-to-business trade fairs can operate safely and effectively, whilst still driving new business to exhibitors and showcasing the latest products and services to visitors.

Toby Wand, Managing Director of 365 Events Ltd., owners of IFEX, comments: “Celebrating its 25th edition in 2022, IFEX has been the cornerstone expo for the foodservice, catering, and hospitality industries in NI. Needed more than ever before, IFEX is crucial for galvanising the industry and driving new business for exhibitors.

“Trade exhibitions provide a platform for businesses to meet and collaborate, creating opportunities for businesses both large and small to grow and expand their market reach. It is critically important for businesses, particularly those in the foodservice and hospitality sector to have a location where they can trade, display new products, be inspired, and share their knowledge – It is for this reason we’re excited to see the show open its doors on Tuesday, 29th March.”

The event is organised by 365 Events Ltd and more than 150 companies from across Ireland will be exhibiting and welcoming approximately 6,000 industry professionals who attend the event to do business, source new products and services, make new contacts and learn from fellow industry experts.

IFEX runs from 29 – 31 March 2022 at the TEC, Belfast. A business-to-business event, you can register to attend for free at ifexexhibition.co.uk.

Caption: Sean Owens, IFEX Salon Culinaire; Mena Khan Jalil, Chef competing at IFEX; Dolan Heaney IFEX Skills Coordinator and Michael Deane

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Brexit juggernaut set to hit hospitality, says Owens https://lcnonline.co.uk/brexit-juggernaut-set-to-hit-hospitality-says-owens/ Fri, 05 Oct 2018 09:38:16 +0000 http://lcnonline.co.uk/?p=7155 As he takes on an influential new position with WorldSkills UK, popular local hospitality figure, Sean Owens, has spoken out about Brexit and the shortage

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As he takes on an influential new position with WorldSkills UK, popular local hospitality figure, Sean Owens, has spoken out about Brexit and the shortage of skilled hospitality labour in Northern Ireland.

One of the best known figures in Northern Ireland’s hospitality sector has told LCN that he believes current difficulties around the sourcing of suitably qualified staff here are getting worse.

Respected chef and hospitality trainer, Sean Owens, has also likened the full impact of Brexit on existing recruitment problems in Northern Ireland to “a juggernaut” which, he says, is approaching but has yet to strike.

Speaking in mid-August, Sean said that he and others had been telling politicians in Northern Ireland about the urgent need for redress in hospitality recruitment for some time

“We have been drawing attention to this since well before the Executive went down and the reality now is that the situation is getting worse,” he added.

“I was in Dublin recently and they have built 79 hotels there in eight years. Yesterday, I looked at the skyline in Belfast and hotels are opening up everywhere. The question needs to be asked, where are the staff coming from? We can’t get housekeepers, chefs or waiters, so what are we going to do?”

Calling for the restoration of hospitality as a ‘priority skills area’, Sean said that it was essential that the industry be made more appealing to potential new recruits:

“Industry attractiveness issues are one of the biggest things affecting us at present,” he added.

Sean also indicated that in his new role as culinary arts training manager with WorldSkills UK, he would be “trying to grasp the nettle” and make a difference for the sector in the UK as a whole, particularly in relation to major issues such as Brexit:

“This is going to be a showstopper for a lot of us,” he warned. “No-one knows the implications of this. Things are fairly good at the moment, you can see that on the Belfast skyline, but my own view is that there is a juggernaut waiting for us when we realise that our supply of so-called foreign workers is no longer available to us and the skills gap, which has been widening, will become an epidemic.”

Afraid

Sean also said that he believed it wasn’t acceptable for government to “sit on their hands and pontificate from their silos”:

“I think all of them are afraid of Brexit,” he stated. “But whether you look at this as an opportunity or as a dysfunctional effort to get yourself into whatever jurisdiction you favour, the reality for all of us is that this uncertainty isn’t helping secure the development of our young people in hospitality.

“But we are trying to solve the problem in a very piecemeal manner. What we need now is a multidisciplinary approach, it’s not just about chefs, the public and private sectors need to work together. On a personal basis, I am trying hard, lobbying and networking with hotels and restaurants on the ground to try and find some approach that will alleviate these problems, at least for a while.”

Originally from Derry-Londonderry, Sean Owens is well-known across the entire hospitality industry in Northern Ireland. Previously the owner and head chef of Gardiners G2 restaurant in Magherafelt and a key figure in the establishment of the catering department at Springvale Training Ltd., in west Belfast, Sean now operates his own independent chef consultancy, SoFood in tandem with his new role at WorldSkills UK, where he is responsible for training UK WorldSkills squad members in preparation for international cookery competitions, including the prestigious WorldSkills event itself.

For many in the sector locally, however, Sean is best known for his long-running association with the leading hospitality and retail event, IFEX, where he has been deeply involved as Salon Culinaire director for many years.

This isn’t the first time that Sean has raised a red flag over recruitment trends in hospitality here. Speaking to LCN as far back as 2014, he warned then of a need for more people to get involved in hospitality training. He also called for greater collaboration between the industry and the training agencies in order to foster greater understanding between catering professionals and the colleges.

Competition

Sean’s new role with WorldSkills UK is based in London, although he works predominantly from his home in Ballyronan. Sean’s been involved with WorldSkills – which champions technical excellence through competition – in some form or other since 1995. In his new position as culinary arts training manager, he takes responsibility for a four-strong team of specially-selected trainees whom he then grooms for national and international competition.

The next big challenge which his team will face will be on in late September when one of them – a young female chef from Glasgow – will represent the UK in Budapest at the Euroskills 2018 event.

“I took this new position on in June following a round of intensive interviews and presentations in London at the HQ of the Craft Guild of Chefs,” said Sean. “That was quite a daunting experience but I was fairly confident because I’d gone for the same post 20 years before. I knew then that I didn’t have the time to execute it properly but now, I have a lot more strings to my bow. I understand national competitions much better and I have a sound track record in the UK and internationally for bringing people to the required standard for national and international events.”

Sean’s team will be looking forward to August next year when the international WorldSkills final is held in Kazan in Russia. Final team selection for that event will take place in March.

Meanwhile, Sean confirmed that arrangements for the next IFEX event in Belfast are progressing well. The huge hospitality and retail event returns to the city in 2020 and planning is already in progress to ensure another successful exhibition.

 

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