Feeding Community, Not Just Cupboards

Send us a text

A mixed bag of food can feel like a puzzle — unless someone shows you how to turn it into dinner, conversation, and community pride. We sit down with Sue, a powerhouse hub leader in Maidstone, to uncover the reality behind a town often labelled affluent. Parkwood sits in the top 10% for deprivation on the Indices of Multiple Deprivation, with food and fuel poverty, health inequalities, and isolation shaping daily life. Sue and the Fusion team respond with practical care: slow-cooker courses, starter cooking sessions, and a live “ready steady cook” night that transformed surplus into meatballs, giant pigs in blankets, and blackberry crumble.

Across the chat, we unpack why trust beats signposting. Fusion brings partners like Citizens Advice into a safe, familiar room, adds advocacy so people aren’t left to navigate alone, and keeps dignity front and centre. Community events aren’t an add-on; they’re strategy. Easter egg bingo, summer picnics, and a homegrown panto build belonging, spark joy, and give residents a reason to show up, meet neighbours, and stay connected. That’s how a food club becomes social infrastructure: it stretches budgets, reduces waste, and opens doors to wider support.

We also dig into the data. Hyperlocal IMD maps help target help where it’s needed most, showing the stark contrast between streets. That’s the thread running through this episode: empowerment over handholding, relationships over referrals, and consistency over promises. If you believe food can be a tool for trust, learning, and resilience, you’ll find ideas here worth borrowing for your own neighbourhood.

Next
Next

How Comic Relief And Sainsbury’s help Tackle Food Insecurity