News by email Donate

Suggestions

UK News

Christian project tackling food insecurity wins £20,000 social action prize

by Nayana Mena
IMG_4502.jpg - Banner image
Image Credit: Premier Christian News

A Christian project that has worked to reduce rising childhood food insecurity won the £20,000 Cinnamon Incubator Competition at St Peter's Church in Notting Hill last night.

Brite Box, run by the charity Voice of Hopes, took the top prize for its church-led recipe kit initiative, helping families eat well on a budget.

Founder Sarah Clay told Premier Christian News she felt “tearful, blown away and so grateful” after winning, and said the investment “means the world” after five years of hard work.

Sarah Clay BRITE BOX (Image Credit: Cinnamon Incubator)

This award comes as The Food Foundation said over one in ten people in the UK were experiencing food insecurity, rising to almost one in seven households with children, and urged the government to halve levels in its upcoming Child Poverty Strategy.

Brite Box, which has provided weekly recipe kits through more than 30 schools has built confidence, reduced stigmas and brought families together through cooking.

Clay said parents “don’t feel embarrassed, they just love it”, adding that God had provided “at every single step of the way”.

Emma Chisholm from Sparkle, James Baker from Garden Hope, Mark KItson, Cinnamon, Amanda Bindon, Cinnamon, Sarah Clay BRITE Box, Emma Malcolm, Bridge the Gap and Darrell McLeish Christian Boxing Alliance 

The other finalists also joined Cinnamon’s two-year incubator. Last year’s winner, Brian Elliot from Starfish Alliance, told Premier: “It’s so much more enjoyable coming back after winning… last year I was a whole package of nerves.”

Garden Hope finalist James Baker said his project had become “a mission field”, adding that gardening gave space for people to encounter “hope and healing” in Christ.

Sian Edwards of Andrews Charitable Trust, who have backed the incubator project for many years, said her organisation supported Cinnamon because “our Christian ethos is essential to us, and we just knew we had to support them”.

Cinnamon Incubator said all finalists showed “extraordinary passion” in serving their communities through the local church.

Support Us
Continue the conversation on our Facebook page

Related Articles

Sign up to our newsletter to stay informed with news from a Christian perspective.

Connect

Donate