High-end chef turns hospice cook after son's death

Carla Fowler
BBC News, Yorkshire
Carla Fowler/BBC Jon Smith smiling at the camera with an industrial kitchen behind him. He is in chef whites and has a brown beard and brown hair.Carla Fowler/BBC
Jon Smith wanted to give back after losing his son, Seb.

A chef has given up his 30-year career in high-end restaurants to cook at the hospice which looked after his child.

Jon Smith's 17-year-old son, Seb, died at St Catherine's Hospice in Scarborough in 2022, after he was diagnosed with leukaemia.

Mr Smith, who once cooked for Queen Elizabeth II, said: "You learn to live with it, but it changes your perspective, without a doubt.

"I needed a reset, and this was it for me. You don't normally get to do real good, so it's very rewarding."

Jon Smith Seb, a teenage boy, looking at the camera. He has a neutral expression. He has straight black hair which is short on the sides and falls over his forehead. He is in a long-sleeved black shirt. He appears to be sat at a table on holiday, with a marina behind him at night.Jon Smith
Seb died from leukaemia at St Catherine's Hospice in Scarborough.

Mr Smith said as well as meeting nutritional needs, he wants to "give that element of warmth and comfort through food when people need it most".

He has travelled the world and owned multiple restaurants in his long career.

St Catherine's needs to fundraise about £6.1m per year to allow it to provide inpatient and community end of life care across North and East Yorkshire.

Members of the public and hospice visitors can try Mr Smith's menu and contribute to the funding of the hospice by visiting the Flavours Bistro at the site.

Lynsey Marsden, whose dad Jimmy Hill passed away from colon cancer at the hospice last August, said he was able to experience the food he had always loved in his final days.

Lynsey Marsden An elderly man smiles at the camera. He has a chequered shirt and royal blue Puma cap on. Behind him is a hedgerow, and it appears to be sunny.Lynsey Marsden
Jimmy Hill died in August at the hospice, and his daughter said he "loved" the drinks Mr Smith made for him.

"He had a very sweet tooth my dad, so Jon made him special milkshakes - Dad loved the iced caramel frappes.

"His taste had changed and he couldn't eat big portions, [but] he actually got to enjoy it. It made a massive difference to him, and I'll never forget it."

She said the atmosphere in the bistro was "lovely" when she and her mum would visit.

"We were really sad. To be able to come somewhere where you can feel 'normal' and be around the public is absolutely amazing."

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