A Slice of Bread and Butter

Corned Beef Mountains

The Bread and Butter Thing

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£8.50 doesn’t go far at the supermarket right now, but in a community food club it can become a proper weekly shop and a moment of relief. 

Carol talks candidly about the point she noticed the change. Not overnight, but gradually, until the bank balance dipped and the overdraft became normal. We get into the real-world details behind “the bills have gone up” from rent and service charges to heating, water and the small costs that chip away at a budget. We also explore how pension credit can unlock extra support, including a social tariff that cuts broadband costs, and we ask a bigger question about digital life: when do you genuinely need the internet, and when is it just another pressure?

Food runs through it all, from a surprise surplus haul of corned beef to the creativity it takes to waste less and share more. We challenge myths about household food waste, track eye-watering price rises in everyday staples like coffee, and talk about what fuel surcharges could mean for food inflation. Through it all, we explain why we’re focused on keeping our member prices steady, even when our costs rise.

Subscribe for more honest conversations about surplus food, affordable food schemes and community support, then share the episode, leave a review, and tell us: what price rise has hit you the hardest?

Welcome And The Food Clubs

SPEAKER_02

Hello and welcome back to a slice of bread and butter with me, Mark, and Vic. We're from the Bread and Butter Think.

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We run a network of mobile food clubs that take surplus food from supermarkets, farms and factories. We take it straight into communities where families are struggling to get by.

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For less than a tenner, our members get bags packed with fruit, veg, fridge food, and cupboard staples. It's a weekly shop that helps stretch the budget and take some of the pressure off.

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Our members are at the heart of everything we do. They turn food into friendship and neighbours into community. And that's what makes us tick.

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It is. And today we're going to talk to Carol from Staley Bridge.

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Being on a state pension. And so a friend told me about the bread and butter.

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Where do you go?

SPEAKER_01

The Ridge Hill Hub, which is in the Old Baptist Church on Amble Side there. And I'm very happy with what I'm getting for£8.50.

SPEAKER_02

Great. So tell me a bit about you then. So obviously retired, what did you used to do?

SPEAKER_01

I was uh in caring for older people for 20 odd years before I retired. Thought I was providing a valuable service, and so I've got the greatest respect for the bread and butter because they're helping the community dealing with food waste as well.

SPEAKER_02

So have you had any weird and wonderful things?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, I've had some very weird things.

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Do share.

SPEAKER_01

The weirdest thing I've had was a very large amount of corned beef. Which I thought I'd never use up in them on the Sundays, but I shared it with my children. I have seven children. The youngest two are in the 30s, and of course they're bringing up young children now, so they struggle the same as me with buying food to last the week.

SPEAKER_02

Corn beef though, I mean there's a story in that, isn't there?

SPEAKER_01

It's so versatile corned beef, isn't it? And it's a good job, really.

SPEAKER_02

Bit of corned beef hash, I guess.

SPEAKER_01

Corn beef hash, corned beef pie, whatever you can turn it into.

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Did your kids even know what corned beef is?

SPEAKER_01

It's not something that they buy regularly.

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Yeah.

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They don't m cook like we used to cook. They eat a lot of pasta and pizza, things like that.

SPEAKER_02

Pasta stretches though.

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Quite healthy, isn't it?

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A lot of people are saying nowadays that we all waste too much food at home. From what you're telling me, it doesn't sound like you do.

SPEAKER_01

No, I use everything. If I can't use it, I share it.

SPEAKER_02

So do you think your kids waste?

SPEAKER_01

No, I don't think so. Because they do live near the knuckle, you know, with having children.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I get it. This is one of the things people are saying, is it's just like it doesn't matter whether you've got money or haven't got money, and if you're near the knuckle, it doesn't matter, you still waste food. But I I don't think that's true.

SPEAKER_01

No, I don't. And if I do have a bit of meat left over, which I can't eat on my plate, then I feed a fox outside. Usually I buy it chicken wings, to be honest.

SPEAKER_02

Hang on, so this is a person that's going to bread and butter because they're near the knuckle themselves, and yeah, they're buying chicken wings for a fox. How does that work?

SPEAKER_01

Well, I'm a bit daft, I suppose, but when it looks at me with those eyes, I just think, poor thing, you know.

Living On A Pension Budget

SPEAKER_02

Hmm. So because you said at the beginning that kind of cost of living's biting.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

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Did it happen overnight? Has it been a gradual thing?

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Did you wake up and I didn't notice it until my bank balance started getting lower and I was needing to go on my overdraft.

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And how long ago do you think that bank balance started feeling like that?

SPEAKER_01

Oh I'd say about twelve months ago. Because the bills have gone up as well.

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Which bills have gone up for you then?

SPEAKER_01

Well, everything. The water, the rent, the gas.

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Do you get the winter fuel allowance?

SPEAKER_01

Yes, I get that. That is a big help.

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And what about the rent? Social landlord?

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It's under 500, just about. But then we have a service charge to pay on top.

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Right.

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Which is 44 a month, 11 pounds a week. And that covers the gardening, the window cleaning, the cleaner which comes in to see to the communal areas. The service charges bump it up to about 550. But we do get it subsidised.

SPEAKER_02

So how do you um keep in touch with kids and grandkids and things?

SPEAKER_01

Mobile phone. They message me all day long usually. They lean on me a lot. The younger ones. Emotional support. Wondering what they should do about this, that, and the other.

Cutting Bills With Social Tariffs

SPEAKER_02

So it sounds like you're even though you're retired, do you mind me asking, do you get just state pension or have you got yourself a pension?

SPEAKER_01

I've got a guaranteed pension credit on with that.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, what does that mean?

SPEAKER_01

That means I can get a lot of other benefits besides. Right. Like I get my BT cheaper.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, that's nice.

SPEAKER_01

The internet went up to like£42 a month. So I rang them and I said I just can't afford this anymore. So they've put me on what they call a social service. Yeah. Which you have to renew every 12 months. And that's£23 a month, but never goes up. Stays at that price. Previously it went up each year, maybe one or two pounds.

SPEAKER_02

42 quid a lot.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. And all I've got is Wi-Fi often. Yeah, yeah. I've no house phone because that's another extra.

SPEAKER_02

That's another extra, isn't it? Yeah. So all you get is the internet and the Wi-Fi, as you say.

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Yeah.

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And then you use your mobile.

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Yeah.

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And what and what do you use it for, the internet?

SPEAKER_01

It's to work with my phone mainly, because I don't do this streaming.

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You just watch everything on preview or whatever.

SPEAKER_01

I just find there's quite a lot on preview. At the moment there is. We've got Mars.

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Yeah, the interrupted Frost. Sorry about that.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, but uh yeah, I do like Frost. And Morse. But that's just finished.

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Mm-hmm.

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Where they've killed him off and spoilers. It's just horrible when they bring Endeavour on. Yeah. You know. And it does relate, doesn't it? Yeah. Because Endeavour has the same traits.

SPEAKER_02

He does.

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He drives a jag and he's got blue eyes. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Well, he does a lot of internal in as well, doesn't he? That emotionally kind of guarded and keeps everything to himself.

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And can't stick to one woman. Things like that.

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I've never I've never taken Morris as a womaniser.

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No, not a womaniser. Just look he just likes intelligent women.

SPEAKER_02

Well, don't we all?

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Yeah.

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So we talked about your youngest. What about the rest of them?

SPEAKER_01

Well, I have children in the 50s as well.

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Yeah.

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They're accomplished. I don't hear much from them other than if they want to take me out for lunch or whatever. My second eldest daughter is doing the London Marathon.

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Nice.

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For um Macmillan. Yeah. Because we lost my father in the year 2000. And grandad was meant a lot to them.

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So it's just your little one that you look after?

SPEAKER_01

Mainly it's the little ones. The others look after me quite a lot. That's nice. They'll ring me up and say, Are you alright, mum? And do you need anything? And I always say no because they've got children they need to provide for.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

I always say no, I'm fine. Unless I want them to mountaineer and pull my curtains down or whatever, and I'm a bit frightened of getting up the ladders now.

What Counts As A Luxury

SPEAKER_02

Get that. Something I ask quite a lot of people is what would you say nowadays you would think is a luxury that pre-COVID, should we say, used to be like an everyday thing for you?

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Well, quite a few things actually.

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Yeah.

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I mean, I like coffee and that's gone up terrible.

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So do you do you still have coffee or have you do you buy a cheaper?

SPEAKER_01

I'll still have it. I only like one brand you've seen, that's Nest Cafe. Yeah. For a large jar of coffee now it's£7.25 in Tesco.

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Right.

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And it is everywhere else, I think.

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Yeah, yeah.

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But Aldi has to price match with Tesco.

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Yeah. What do you think it used to cost you?

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Pre COVID it was about two pounds something.

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Right, so it's nearly three times as much now.

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Yeah.

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That's a lot.

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It's a lot. Try and make it last as long as possible.

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And how long does it last you?

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About a fortnight. It's not too bad. Yeah, I think it's the meat and the fish that have gone up astronomic in price.

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Yeah.

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And like I say, I don't buy a lot of meat, only the chicken for the fox.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, I don't know that she said the butchers, but Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_02

You're right. I've leapt to butchers.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, that made it sound even more extravagant. Well, you know, we've all got our quirks.

SPEAKER_02

We do, we do. And speaking of quirks, I almost felt like I needed a deep dive on the uh broadband service, right? Because she was paying 42 quid and now she's on a social tariff, and I'm doing that in inverted commas social tariff of uh roughly half that now. But all she does is she doesn't stream at all and she just puts her phone and Wi-Fi at home. I'm not even sure she needs an internet connection. All she watches on TV is free view.

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Do you not need it for free view?

SPEAKER_02

No, not at all.

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I don't know. I don't watch real tele.

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That's all that Carol watches, traditional tell. Yeah. I've seen a few people do it, and in fact, my brother Chris does it. They put tele on in the background as a company during the day.

SPEAKER_00

I can see that, not wanting to be in silence, just having the noise.

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Yeah.

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It's it's hard, isn't it? Because who's there saying to Carol, really, do you need this?

SPEAKER_02

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

Have you thought about this other option? Feels like you know, it's kind of forced on everyone, isn't it? Well, you've got to have the internet. And actually, in most cases, we're arguing that people do need the internet, and maybe Carol's kind of a bit of an exception.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, definitely. But yeah, I like a bit of Morse and a bit of frost, personally. Proper old school. Definitely brought up on those.

SPEAKER_00

I mean, you two were getting like into the detail.

SPEAKER_02

I left it with an Inspector Lindley recommendation.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, I've never heard of Inspector Lindley.

SPEAKER_02

They're good books as well, just just for the record. In fact, I'd say the books are better.

SPEAKER_00

The books are always better.

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True.

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Yeah, yeah. So corned beef then.

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Yeah, that was a staple in my childhood, corned beef.

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Is that what made you a veggie?

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So get get this, Vic. Mum would buy two ounces of corned beef and make a corned beef hash for six of us from it.

SPEAKER_00

Um what's an ounce?

SPEAKER_02

Oh god, right. I don't know the conversion to it. I'm gonna have to Google that.

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I only know grams.

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It's 28 grams in an ounce, so 56 grams.

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Like absolutely no corned beef then.

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Two slices effectively. Wow.

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You certainly didn't have the uh what was it, two kilograms or something?

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That would have been a challenge, but credit to her. She managed.

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Again, the sharing and the uh creativity. You can make a pie, you can make a hash.

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Yeah.

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I'd never heard of corned beef pie.

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Well, I guess it's you can put any meat in a pie, right? Because it just goes in a bit of a sauce and sorted.

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I guess so. But this is where our members are better than we are.

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Yeah, definitely, definitely. And going back to food waste as well, I I think Carol was on the money and and she was definitely reckoning that her family were not food wasters. I know last week we talked about generational food waste. She was not on the same page. She was like, no, no, no, we don't waste.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. And it was Carol that was saying that the family's to the knuckle, yeah, wasn't it? Yeah, yeah. And I've never heard that phrase before, but I knew exactly what it meant.

SPEAKER_02

Near the knuckle, yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Uh and it's true, you know, if you can't afford food, then you're not going to waste food. Makes total sense to me.

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Absolutely. And that's why we'll just have to keep pushing rap and get that work done.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, I've got some ideas. The other thing that made me think about last week as well is we were talking then about how do you know when it's time to shop with bread and butter? And it's like we don't talk about people going into their overdraft. We've not really discussed this very much. And I was like, well, obviously, but wouldn't that be a good sign that actually, oh, I'm nipping in my overdraft, I could go to bread and butter. Yeah. And not be in your overdraft for 12 months before you think, oh, now I need to get there.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah. And that's kind of what she was doing, right? She was saying, got a routine, this is what I'm buying, but suddenly everything that I was buying is now making me go in my overdraft. Something's wrong.

Coffee Prices Inflation And Fuel Surcharges

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, and like coffee.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, well, you see, I I had to Google coffee. So I found this great site, and I'm I'm sure there'll be people out there going, Oh god, you haven't found this sign, it's been there decades, Mark. Camel Camel Camel, right?

SPEAKER_00

What what is this?

SPEAKER_02

Camel Camel Camel tracks Amazon prices for food since Amazon started, right? So I looked at the Nescafe coffee that she was talking about just to see. So back in June 2020, that jar of coffee that she was talking about was£2 on Amazon.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_02

Six years ago it was two pounds. Current price,£6.75. So it's more than tripled in price in six years.

SPEAKER_00

I mean, we see it everywhere, but it's interesting to just do that deep dive onto one thing and say, and how do you know about camel, camel, camel? And who on earth called their website that?

SPEAKER_02

I don't know, but I'm sure there'll be uh others in in a very BBC type way. There will be other comparative and historic trendy websites.

SPEAKER_00

This is my evening now going down a rabbit hole.

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I wouldn't, I'd be careful. It is a rat hole. You can lose time in that website.

SPEAKER_00

Wow. Yeah. I mean, food prices have continually grown year on year, haven't they?

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, and we've talked about that a lot, right? But we haven't necessarily for things like tea and coffee, right?

SPEAKER_00

No, that's true. But I also think that they're potentially gonna go up again, which is kind of worrying, right? Because they're already high and people already can't afford.

SPEAKER_02

Well, you know they're gonna, you know, everybody's signaling it already. Food inflation was starting to normalize. It's just not gonna now.

SPEAKER_00

No.

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Because all of the hauliers are gonna start putting fuel surcharges on everything they do.

SPEAKER_00

We got that letter today.

SPEAKER_02

There you go. Yeah. And that's what's gonna happen. That surcharge, it will end up on your food, it'll end up in any deliveries that you get from anywhere.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Everything's just gonna get expensive again and inflation's gonna go one direction and it's not down.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. But you know, while inflation's been going up, bread and butter prices haven't been going up.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I know. I I think you should explain.

SPEAKER_00

Well, it's really important. Like, we're trying to help people stretch their budgets. So if we put our prices up.

SPEAKER_02

But our prices have gone up, our costs have gone up, Victor.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, massively. Yeah. So we're just working harder behind the scenes to make sure that we can carry on delivering for everyone. And we'll continue to do that. Because us putting our prices up right now doesn't feel like the right thing to do, does it? It feels like counterproductive for everybody.

SPEAKER_02

No, because we tend to have this conversation annually, don't we, with the board?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. And I'm the one that's going in saying, I really don't want to do it. We can't do it.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So we just work harder. But yeah, we got our first letter today about the uh Middle East fuel prices and the surcharge. So I'm waiting for other holyers to uh I was gonna say it won't be the last. No. I know, sadly.

SPEAKER_02

So if you'd like to know more about the bread and butter thing and what we get up to, you can find us at Team TBBT on TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter, on LinkedIn or online at breadandbutterthing.org.

SPEAKER_00

And if you've got any feedback or thoughts on the podcast, or you'd like to come and be our guest, drop us an email at podcast at breadandbutthing.org.

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And we are always open to new members at all of our hubs, so if you or someone you know would benefit from our affordable food scheme, you can find your nearest hub on the Become a Member pages of our website.

SPEAKER_00

And please do all those things that podcasts asks you to do. Like us, subscribe, leave us a review, share us with your friends, and chat about us on social.

SPEAKER_02

And we'll see you next time.

SPEAKER_00

See ya.