
Fife care home head chef wins mystery box challenge at HC-One's inaugural Chef of the Year Competition
Roy joined Balfarg Care Home in January 2024 and quickly became an integral part of the care community.
Launched in February 2025, the HC-One Chef of the Year Competition was created to celebrate the talent, creativity, and dedication of HC-One chefs across the UK. The event highlights the essential role of care home chefs in preparing nutritious, personalised meals that enhance residents' wellbeing and everyday experiences.
Roy advanced through a rigorous three-stage competition, beginning with the submission of his signature dish, including an innovative and nutritionally balanced Level 5 minced and moist option praised for its excellence. He progressed to the semi-finals in Leeds on 18th June, where his technical skill and creative presentation secured his place among six national finalists.
In the grand final's mystery box challenge, the six finalists went head-to-head in a mystery box challenge where the finalists were presented with a box full of mystery ingredient items including caramel, coconut milk, white chocolate and KitKat sauce to create the ultimate dessert for residents. The more ingredients the contestants used as part of the dish, the more points they gained as well as being judged on their explanation for choosing why they created the dessert and how it would benefit residents living in their care homes.
Roy wowed judges by crafting a cut fresh raspberry and banana mousse with a madeira cake base, delicate, easily digestible, and made with residents' needs in mind. The dessert featured chocolate coco, Nestlé milk powder, KitKat sauce, and white chocolate, strategically selected both for taste and health benefits.
The judging panel included:
Chris Bonner, Executive Chef & Nutrition & Hydration Lead, HC-One
Jamie Clews, Development Chef, Metcalfe Catering
Ben Ross, Key Account Manager, Unox
Nick Vadis, Culinary Director, Compass UK & Ireland
Special Guest Judge: James Tugendhat, CEO, HC-One
Roy was presented his prize, a Nescafe Dolce Gusto Mini Me Coffee Machine Starter Kit by Chris Bonner, Executive Chef and Nutrition & Hydration Lead at HC-One.
Roy credited his success to the support of Suzanne Stirling, Group Development Chef for Scotland, whose mentorship has helped him thrive in care catering.
Roy Simpson, Head Chef at HC-One Scotland's Balfarg Care Home, said: 'I'm absolutely honoured to have won the Mystery Box Challenge at HC-One's first ever Chef of the Year competition. It was a fantastic experience to showcase the kind of food we create every day in our care homes, meals that are not just nutritious but made with love and respect for the people we serve. Being able to bring a smile to our residents through food is what drives me, and I'm proud to be part of a team that values kindness, quality, and care.'
Mark Meacham, Head of Catering and Housekeeping Support Services at HC-One, praised Roy's achievement: 'Well done to Roy on winning the Mystery Box Challenge in our very first Chef of the Year competition. The competition was an important opportunity to formally recognise the expertise, dedication and professionalism demonstrated by our chefs across the organisation. Every day they deliver far more than food, they contribute to the dignity, wellbeing and quality of life of our residents.'
The event was made possible thanks to the generous support of sponsors including EF-group, Nestlé, Unox, Contiquip, and Lockhart Catering.
1 . Contributed
Roy Simpson, Head Chef at HC-One Scotland's Balfarg Care Home in action in the kitchen Photo: Submitted Photo Sales
2 . Contributed
Roy Simpson, Head Chef at HC-One Scotland's Balfarg Care Home being presented with his prize at the HC-One Chef of the Year Competition, presented by Chris Bonner Photo: Submitted Photo Sales
3 . Contributed
A selection of the Mystery Box Challenge desserts at the HC-One Chef of the Year Competition Photo: Submitted Photo Sales
4 . Contributed
Roy Simpson, Head Chef at HC-One Scotland's Balfarg Care Home in action in the kitchen Photo: Submitted Photo Sales
Related topics: FifeYorkGlenrothesEdinburgh
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Record
7 hours ago
- Daily Record
Blood of My Blood star Jamie Roy's inside life from failed Outlander auditions to actress girlfriend
Fans of Outlander: Blood of Blood are keen to know more about the actor Outlander: Blood of My Blood premiered to a strong start and a hugely positive fan reaction. The show continues this week and viewers are keen to know about the cast of the show, including Scottish star Jamie Roy who plays Brian Fraser and the father of Outlander's heroic Jamie Fraser (played by Sam Heughan) and has shared behind-the-scenes snaps from filming. Here's a look at the star's life, including his early years, how he lost out on a role in Outlander and who he's currently dating. Jamie Roy's early life The 32-year-old actor, who was born in Greenock on the West Coast of Scotland, before his family moved to the small town of Lenzie just outside of Glasgow. He only came to acting later on after attending business school in Glasgow and getting a business degree at Strathclyde University. After graduating he landed a desk job and decided it wasn't for him, before starting to take acting classes at night while working during the day. Roy later got the chance to move to the US after he landed a job at a firm in America, but decided to turn it down and pursue acting instead. He move to Miami, Florida in 2016 and continued to follow his dreaming of acting. He admitted to Glamour how he'd felt like an 'outsider for the longest time' as he'd not attended drama school or had any formal training apart from his 'fantastic acting classes and life'. During his time in Florida he worked on stage at Disney theme parks, which he said served as some of his 'best training' because he was in front of a stage of 1,000 people for each show. In 2019, he moved to LA and continued to act before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, but afterwards he started to get some film roles as he built up his acting CV. Roy is now a US citizen according to IMDb and splits his time between Scotland and LA. Jamie Roy's failed Outlander auditions Before landing the lead in the Outlander prequel series, Roy went for the part of Militia Man Number One in season seven but failed to get the role. Roy said: 'I thought that I was going to get this role, I was pinned for it, and then didn't get it and was heartbroken.' Only later did he learn, after being cast as Brian, that he'd been dropped from the role after senior Starz TV executives wanted to keep him for Blood of My Blood - even before the show had been greenlit. He added: 'It just shows you that you never know what's happening behind closed doors and what fate has in store for you. It all worked out as it was meant to, I suppose.' Roy also revealed how he went for another part in a storyline involving Roger MacKenzie's (Richard Rankin) in Outlander, but didn't get the role either. Brian Fraser was Roy's third audition for the Outlander team. Since taking on Blood of My Blood, Roy has revealed he's received support from Heughan, who has given him a wealth of advice. "[He told] me just to appreciate every moment, even on the tough days, because it goes past so quickly,' Roy told People in a recent chat. Jamie Roy's sweet romance with fellow actress Roy has been in a relationship with fellow actress Annika Foster for five years. She previously posted a series of snaps on her Instagram account of them posing on Edinburgh's Royal Mile to mark their two-year anniversary back in 2023. Along with the sweet photos, she captioned the post: 'happy 2-year honey (mustard) ilysm [sic].' More recently, Foster shared a photo of them from Los Angeles as well as a Blood of My Blood billboard, showing her support for her partner's work. The 31-year-old American actress has starred in Meeting You, Meeting Me, The Drawing and Burning Lies. Some of her other roles include short film Perfidious, Melody, Prom Nightmare and Isolation Experiment, the latter two are in post-production. Foster's forthcoming projects include Crossing Stars and Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary. Roy and Foster worked together on the 2021 film Burning Lies in which they played love interests. Last year, the couple appeared together in the independent movie Meeting You, Meeting Me. Aside from her acting career, Foster had also worked as a part-time nanny and enjoys travelling the world, according to her interview on the Real Conversations with Jacob Young podcast. She said: 'I live in a studio apartment with my partner. And it's actually … pretty easy.' Adding: 'But I forget to go to work. I nanny on the side and I come home and he's here.' Outlander season 8 will air on Starz and MGM+ via Prime Video in early 2026


The Independent
15 hours ago
- The Independent
Richard Thomas dons wig and mustache to play icon Mark Twain in one-man play touring the US
Richard Thomas has not one but two big shoes to fill when he goes out on the road this summer in a celebrated one-man show. The Emmy Award winner and Tony Award nominee is portraying the great American writer Mark Twain in a play written and performed for decades by the late Hal Holbrook. Thomas immediately accepted the offer to star in the 90-minute 'Mark Twain Tonight!' that tours more than a dozen states this summer and fall before wondering what he'd gotten himself into. 'I walked down to the street and I said, 'Are you crazy? What are you out of your mind?'' he says, laughing. 'I had to grapple with who's the bigger fool — the man who says, 'Yes, I'll do it' or the man that says, 'No, I won't'?' Holbrook portrayed the popular novelist and humorist for more than a half century starting in 1954, making over 2,300 performances to a collective audience of more than 2 million. He and Thomas were fond of each other and would see each other's work. The show mixes Twain's speeches and passages from his books and letters to offer a multidimensional look at an American icon, who toured the U.S. with appearances. 'I'm going to feel very much like I'm not only following in Hal's footsteps, but in Twain's as well,' says Thomas, who began his career as John-Boy Walton on TV's 'The Waltons' and became a Broadway mainstay. Thomas jokes that Holbrook had 50 years to settle into the role and he has only a year or so. 'I have the advantage on him that he started when he was 30 and he was pretending to be an old man. I'm 74 so I'm right there. That's the one area where I'm up on him.' 'It's time for Twain' The new tour kicks off this week in Hartford, Connecticut — appropriately enough, one of the places Twain lived — and then goes to Maryland, Iowa, Arkansas, North Carolina, Kansas, Tennessee, New York, New Jersey, Utah, California, Arizona, Alabama, Utah and Florida by Christmastime. Then in 2026 — the 60th anniversary of the Broadway premiere — it goes to Texas, Colorado, Wisconsin and Ohio. 'It's time for Twain, you know? I mean, it's always time for Twain, always. He's always relevant because he's utterly and completely us, with warts and all,' says Thomas. The actor will travel with a stage manager and a trunk with his costumes, but all the other elements will be sourced locally by the venues — like desks and chairs, giving each show local touches. 'There's something about doing a show for people in their own community, in their theater that they support, that they raise money for. They're not coming to you as tourists. You're coming to them.' Thomas has done a one-man show before — 'A Distant Country Called Youth' using Tennessee Williams letters — but that allowed him to read from the script on stage. Here he has no such help. ' One of the keys is to balance the light and the shadow, how funny, how outrageous, the polemic and the darkness and the light. You want that balanced beautifully,' he says. Twain represents America Other actors — notably Val Kilmer and Jerry Hardin — have devised one-man shows about the creator of Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer, who still manages to fascinate. A new biography of Twain by Ron Chernow came out this year, which Thomas is churning through. Thomas sees Twain as representing America perfectly: 'He just lets it all hang out there. He's mean-spirited; he's generous. He's bigoted; he is progressive. He hates money; he wants to be the richest man in America. All of these fabulous contradictions are on display.' Thomas has lately become a road rat, touring in 'Twelve Angry Men' from 2006-08, 'The Humans' in 2018 and starring as Atticus Finch in Aaron Sorkin's adaptation of 'To Kill a Mockingbird' from 2022-24. Orin Wolf, CEO of tour producer NETworks Presentations, got to watch Thomas on the road in 'To Kill a Mockingbird' and says having him step into Twain will strengthen the theater community across the country 'It's so rare nowadays to have a true star of the road,' Wolf says, calling Thomas 'a breed of actor and artist that they rarely make anymore.' 'I'm delighted to be supporting him and delighted that he's chosen to do this because I think this is something he could also take on for hopefully many years,' he adds. After Twain, Thomas will next be seen on Broadway this spring opposite Renée Elise Goldsberry and Marylouise Burke in David Lindsay-Abaire's new comedy, 'The Balusters.' But first there's the eloquence and wry humor in a show about Twain that reveals he was often a frustrated optimist when it came to America. 'I think it reflects right now a lot of our frustration with how things are going,' says Thomas. 'Will things ever be better and can things ever better? Or are we just doomed to just be this species that is going to constantly eat its own tail and are we ever going to move forward?'

The National
16 hours ago
- The National
Post-war Scotland play brought to life at Edinburgh Fringe
Former Herald and Scotsman journalist Kenneth Roy's The Invisible Spirit is often described as a searing yet witty dramatisation of Scotland's people, places and politics in the wake of the Second World War. Spanning from 1945 to 1975, The Invisible Spirit captures the complexities of a nation struggling to grasp a sense of its own identity while highlighting the social and economic desperation Scotland faced through the failings of its ruling class. Stories of poverty, diseases, scandals and serial killers are told through the eyes of three actors in the backdrop of shipyards and tenement slums as The Invisible Spirit makes its first-ever appearance on stage. READ MORE: Bold plans to save Scottish BBC studios from 'fading into history' unveiled Starring Chris Alexander, Fergus John McCann and Elaine Stirrat, and directed by Katie Jackson, Roy's beloved biography of Scotland will come to life for festival audiences at theSpace throughout August. It's a story of desperation, as Elieen Reid, daughter of the Scottish trade unionist Jimmy Reid, said, left her with tears in her eyes, but also one of community and hope. Roy's 'mischievous' storytelling managed to conjure laugh-out-loud moments throughout from the veteran actor Bill Paterson through his unsparing critique of the political and judicial class. The long-time friend of Roy's, Alan McIntyre, made his producing debut with The Invisible Spirit, as he said he believed it had been a real shame the author never got the play produced despite writing an adaptation for the theater before his death in 2018. 'It's been a great sort of experience watching it come to fruition,' McIntyre said. He added that 'it was just great to see something that had only ever lived on a piece of paper coming to life with great actors and great staging. 'It just feels as if we have done him justice by putting it on.' McIntyre, who is the international board chair of the Royal Conservatoire in Glasgow, said one of the biggest challenges with the play was cutting the script by around 30 minutes so that it would fit the Fringe's time constraint of one-hour shows. 'I had this experience of trying to edit it down and feeling as if Kenneth was standing behind me saying, 'Don't touch that. That's really important. You can get rid of that',' McIntyre joked. Kenneth Roy He explained that he tried to edit the story so that it maintained the core themes of Roy's story. One of the main themes of The Invisible Spirit is the idea that Scotland thinks of itself as a socially democratic country, but the reality is that the establishment protects itself and that working-class people are 'screwed over' on a regular basis by the establishment, which tries to protect itself. The story is told through three narrators: The Daily Record, The Bulletin, and The Scotswoman, not a newspaper, but representing women's voices, as they walk the viewer from VE Day in George Square to the 1970s oil boom, weaving through the Gorbals, the Clydeside yards, and down the pits. One of the most potent scenes is Jimmy Reid's legendary rectorial address, Alienation, best known as the rat race speech, which he delivered at Glasgow University in October 1971, during his attempt to save jobs at the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders. His daughter, who attended one of the opening nights, said the play is a 'tour de force' as it seamlessly depicted numerous historical moments during the 30-year period - including her father's speech. 'The way they highlighted dad's Alienation address was very powerful,' Elieen said. 'The speech transcended politics, especially party politics, and people, young people going to the play and learning something of their own history here in Scotland, is really important.' (Image: Maritime Museum) Elieen added: 'Kenneth was a brilliant chronicler with his dry wit and sort of melancholic humanity that pervaded his work. 'Looking back on the Alienation speech, it injected a kind of pathos for me. I was a bit weepy at the end.' Elieen praised the play's ability to embody Roy's writing as she said it paid homage to his lament of Scotland's lost industry incredibly well. Best known for his wide range of roles, including House of the Dragon and Fleabag, Paterson got to know Roy and said the words 'just came running off the page' when he first saw the book's adaptation. Paterson said Roy's witty, wise, and mischievous charm oozes through his writing and that despite the bleak backdrop, the story of The Invisible Spirit still manages to draw laughter through his piercing observations. 'You giggle at it, you laugh out loud,' he said. The veteran actor said that despite Roy's story being set decades ago, it highlights to audiences that today's politics have moved on much since the Second World War. Tickets can be found here, and The Invisible Spirit runs from August/11, 13-16/ 18-23.