Members of the Batch Cook Club are standing together for a group photo. In front of them is a table with used plates and glasses. The members are wearing white cooking aprons. They are inside a cooking class kitchen. Photography: Rebecca Naen

No coffee, no cake - a twist on Macmillan Coffee Morning

Blog
Published: 25 August 2025
When the founders of Batch Cook Club ran a Macmillan Coffee Morning, they did things differently - and served up peanut miso noodles.

Rachel Finn, from The Guardian

A person is holding up a plate of watermelon slices. Photography: Rebecca Maen

Seema Vekaria and Laurie Su-Yin Roche founded Batch Cook Club with the idea of helping young families rediscover the fun of cooking and eating together, but they soon realised that their sociable cooking sessions held a much wider appeal.

"Whoever you are, and as much as you might like cooking, there comes a point where you can get demotivated," says Vekaria. "If you have to do it every day, it can become a chore."

The Bristol-based events they run now attract a wide range of local people interested in batch cooking nutritious meals - and enjoying the social side of sitting down to sample what they've made before they go home. Recipes are mostly plant-based and use fresh ingredients, with enough provided so that the "chefs" can make several portions to package up and take away with them for the week ahead.

Batch Cook Club's mission is to make cooking a sociable event, reinvigorating the sometimes humdrum process of preparing meals. The founders also see group cooking sessions as a great way to tackle social isolation in communities, and have funding to run sessions for people who might not otherwise be able to attend.

"I grew up going to big gatherings where there'd be a group of women always sitting around chopping or peeling or cooking or frying something," Vekaria says. "And that's the vibe that we want to bring to the Batch Cook Club sessions."

Since Batch Cook Club was founded last year, Vekaria and Su-Yin Roche have run 36 events across Bristol. Cooks have batch cooked brunches, suppers and snacks, whipping up treats such as savoury feta and spinach brownies and Thai-inspired curries.

A group of people are gathered around a table. There are people talking to each other, other preparing food and drinks. They appear inside a cooking class kitchen. Photography: Rebecca Naen.

'I grew up going to big gatherings where there'd be a group always chopping or peeling or frying. That's the vibe I want to bring.'

Tonight there is a twist because Batch Cook Club is raising money for Macmillan Cancer Support. Fundraising is vital as it helps us support more than 3 million people living with cancer with emotional and practical support. Vekaria and Su-Yin Roche have planned their own take on the more traditional Coffee Morning fundraiser.

"We want to show that Coffee Mornings don't have to be about coffee, they don't have to be in the morning and they don't have to be about cake," Su-Yin Roche says. "We want to show that there are other ways of doing it."

A person is holding a savoury pastry item in their hand. It is over a plate that has noodles and green veggies on it. Photography: Rebecca Naen

This approach is totally in line with our philosophy of encouraging supporters to run their own style of event under the Coffee Morning banner. For Vekaria and Su-Yin Roche, working the fundraising element into their cooking evening was simple as both are focused on community and food.

For the special event, Rachel joined Batch at Square Food Foundation, a charity-run community cooking space in south Bristol. The chefs - couples, friends and siblings - are lined up at cooking stations, ready to get chopping. For many, it's not their first time at a session, and they say that what keeps them coming back is the sense of community the club is building.

The Kitchen was decorated using the contents of the free Coffee Morning fundraising kit - the cheerful green and white bunting and balloons add a sense of occasion to the evening. For sustainability-minded Vekaria and Su-Yin Roche, the fact that the Macmillan pack uses recycled materials is a great bonus.

On the menu was vegan peanut miso noodles served with vegetable and tofu rich-paper dumplings. Ingredients were taken from a colourful centre table stacked with vegetables: mushrooms, carrots, red onions, cabbage and herbs. As we cook, the chefs put cash into donation boxes or make digital donations using a QR code and reflected on the joy of cooking together.

"It's a really nice mix of nationalities and food from different cultures," says one of the cooks. Another reflects on the ease of taking a healthy meal from the freezer and fighting food waste in the process: "When 'past you' has made a meal for present you, you're like, 'Ah that was nice of me!' You're going to cook anyway, so you might as well cook three times as much."

Vekaria says: "This is about doing Coffee Morning in our own way, which aligns with our values and allows us to do food that doesn't include sugar. It's a chance for us to talk to our own club members, people who love what we do, and be able to give them what they come to us for. And also raise money for Macmillan."

The members echo Vekaria's testament. "It's so special to be part of this. Cancer affects so many of us - Coffee Morning makes us feel like we and Macmillan can make a difference," says Corrine Dowlaty. While Holly Alpren emphasises the importance of raising funds for charity: "It was fantastic to raise money for Macmillan - their nurses do such incredible work to support people during the hardest of times."

Coffee Morning was launched in 1990, and has since grown into all kinds of get-togethers, from drag cocktail evenings to pet-friendly events. So, if you have a community of like-minded people who get together to share a passion, chance are you've got everything you need to turn it into a fundraising powerhouse, just like the Batch Cook Club.

A group of people are gathered around a food preparation counter. There are different ingredients on the counter. The people are wearing white cooking aprons.

This article was originally published on theguardian.com as part of a commercial campaign for Macmillan Cancer Support and Guardian Labs Get together for Good campaign.

Photography by Rebecca Naen.