Jim Sutcliffe: Young Butcher of the Year

Jim Sutcliffe won the title of Young Butcher of the Year in 2009. Photo: Samantha Viner

Jim Sutcliffe won the title of Young Butcher of the Year in 2009. Photo: Samantha Viner

Question

Which job requires being surrounded by death, cold temperatures and a good sense of humour?

Answer

A butcher.

Jim Sutcliffe was, until recently, the Young Butcher of the Year. His title ran out in November but his enthusiasm for his trade seems to never end. Jim spoke to us about what goes into making a good butcher. It’s not just the skills, it’s also personality.

He said that you “need to be hard working and dedicated and you need to take pride in the finished product. Some people don’t care what something looks like when they’ve finished with it and you need to be prepared to work long hours and enjoy the cold and have a good sense of humour really.

“When I was training, I trained under nine different butchers and every one of them did it differently but the one thing that was consistent with them all was that everybody liked to have a bit of a joke. Everything from prank phone calling people to hanging up on meat hooks in the fridge.”

Jim won the title of Young Butcher of the Year last year and the recognition meant a lot to him. “It meant a great deal to win it because it’s a trade that’s not very recognised in the sort of wider world. If you speak to people in the street a butcher is no different to a car mechanic or something else, people don’t see the effort that goes into it.”

The programme hopefully meant a lot to the public too by revealing what really happens behind the scenes. “In the supermarket culture that we’re in when you go in there and everything is done, it’s done by a machine and it’s prepared, they don’t think about the traditional butcher and all the effort that has to go in behind the scenes.

“The programme itself was good because it exposed the back room work to the general public and it recognised a trade that doesn’t get a lot of mention and sort of on the back of that hopefully it sort of inspired younger people to come into it.”

Jim Sutcliffe is the manager of Meridian Meats in Louth. Photo: Samantha Viner

Jim Sutcliffe is the manager of Meridian Meats in Louth. Photo: Samantha Viner

Jim believes that winning the programme meant that he was more trusted in the butchery community as well as by customers. This original lack of trust is most likely due to his age- the average age of a butcher in the UK is 55 and Jim is only 24.

“Probably the biggest effect it had was it exposed me to the outside world and people cared a little bit more about my opinions…So that was a good thing and it was also nice because it’s a trade where you’re not really recognised until you’re a lot older, so people don’t take you seriously customers come in the shop and think ‘how can you have a butcher of my age that knows anything about meat’ and so it meant people took me a bit more seriously.”

Jim also believes that Lincolnshire is one of the best producers in the British Isles. “In Lincolnshire people accuse us of being stuck behind the times, and we’re 50 years behind anywhere else and that’s one of the things that makes our meat here very good, because the farms are small. They tend to be mixed and they’re growing their own grain, make their own fodder, it’s not intensively reared.”

“We’re very lucky, in this county we’ve got meat, vegetables, fish, fruit, all sorts. We’re one of the only counties in the British Isles that has all those things coming in…so it’s something that we’re very proud of. It means that if you’re a chef or something like that you’ve got a huge great big larder of produce to use that’s all local.”

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