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Well done Bob You served up Mr Naga as a condiment? Bet that blew the heads off a few of the uninitiated!
A further thought is the hope that you arranged all of the following ahead of carrying out the work:- registered your kitchen with the local authority- registered the new business venture with HMRC- took out an insurance policy against what could be sky-high claims if anyone at the party went down with food poisoning.
Fantastic accomplishment Bob. Get the Olympics out the way then you can get stuck into hiring yourself out - anglo-asian caterer I meant : I expect mates rates of course ;D
Are you suggesting that anyone who holds a dinner party now needs an insurance policy in case they poison someone? If so then I think having people round for dinner in future would become extinct....
Hi Bob, did you cook the 4 x qty of each main dish in a single large pan or did you cook a normal quantity four times? If the former, how did you approach the thorny issue of how to scale spices and other ingredients? Just quadruple everything or some other ratio?I can't imagine you'll be cooking individual portions when catering for an Olympic team, so guess you've managed to address the issue of how to cook at scale.
Quote from: 976bar on July 01, 2012, 07:08 AMAre you suggesting that anyone who holds a dinner party now needs an insurance policy in case they poison someone? If so then I think having people round for dinner in future would become extinct.... No; of course not. Cooking in your house for friends is different to being used as a catering contractor by someone else. The authorities would point to the scale of the cooking and the fact that the food was being carried out to be served up elsewhere. Would I have done the same? Probably, but I'm in no doubt it would break local authority rules in terms of the environmental health rules.If the money (reimbursement) went through your limited company, it points even more to the fact that it was a commercial contract. The transactions would also be included in the company accounts and would be notified to HMRC in that way, so that's OK. I suggest you took a risk not having insurance - even for a one off contract. It would be like not having home insurance for a few months. There's a very low chance you'd have a burglary or the house would burn down during that time, but it's the risk you take.
This was purely a cash in hand to pay for what I spent on materials so no need to go through the company as there was no profit made, so no taxes or VAT are due. In fact I probably lost out when I consider the gas and electric used, but as I said earlier this was purely for experience.