From Nervous Newcomer to National Champion: Erin Ward’s Story

Photos of Erin Ward winning the prize and cooking in the kitchen

Erin Ward, Catering Manager and School Chef of the Year 2025, shares how entering a competition she almost talked herself out of changed everything.

When Erin Ward first spotted the School Chef of the Year (SCOTY) competition at a conference, she did what many of us do when faced with something exciting and terrifying in equal measure: she walked straight past it. Months later, following the loss of her father, Erin’s outlook changed. She decided it was time to stop letting fear make her choices for her.

What followed was a journey that began with an entry she submitted without expectation, moved through the nerves of competing on the day of the event, and ended with the shock of hearing her name called as SCOTY 2025 winner. In that moment, she reached for the wine before bursting into tears, overwhelmed by what had changed.

To delve deeper into Erin’s journey, we sat down with her to talk about the win, her Leadership and Management apprenticeship, being a woman in catering, and what it really means to back yourself.

The SCOTY Win

You’ve described yourself as someone who almost didn’t enter. What finally made you do it? 

“After losing my dad, I decided it was time to stop shying away from things because of anxiety and fear of failure. I thought, just give it a go. I sent my paper entry, and honestly, I never expected to hear anything back.” 

She didn’t win her regional heat. But she did get through the final as a wildcard, and that changed everything. 

When third place was announced, and it wasn’t her, Erin reached for the wine. Seconds later, she heard her name. 

“I shan’t repeat what I said at the time, but I then burst into tears, more from shock than anything. All I could think was, ‘I want to call my Mum and tell her. I did it. I smashed it for Dad.” 

Her dishes, Pork Bao Buns and Sweetchoes, were developed with student feedback front and centre.

The emphasis was on sustainability, fun, and what she calls ‘giving people the Yums’.

The Apprenticeship Effect

Erin is completing a Leadership and Management apprenticeship through Learnmore. She describes the programme as both a confidence and skills builder:

Women in the Culinary Industry

Erin has worked across both commercial and contract catering, and her experience of gender dynamics in the industry has shifted depending on the environment.

In commercial kitchens, she witnessed real disparity early on, including a female colleague passed over for promotion because a head chef felt it was “easier to get along with a bloke”.

School catering, by contrast, is heavily female at ground level, often staffed by parents and carers who need a career that fits around family life. But leadership, she notes, still skews male.

Her advice to women considering a career in the industry is characteristically direct: there is definitely a place.

Leading Others, Learning Together

One of the more unexpected dimensions of Erin’s apprenticeship journey is how it’s shaped her relationship with her own team, including Dave, one of her direct reports who is also on a Chef Apprenticeship programme.

“His apprenticeship goes hand in hand with mine. I can coach him through his, and he can learn from my experience.”

She is adding ‘Davies Delicious Dishes’ to the menu so he can practise his new skills on site.

It’s the kind of circular, supportive learning culture that Learnmore’s programmes are designed to create, and Erin is living proof of what’s possible when a manager is invested in the growth of those around them.

Those values have been tested in real situations. When Erin faced staff challenges in her kitchen, she turned to the tools from her apprenticeship: reflections, SMART goals, and values work to help her team understand each other better and work more efficiently.

One tangible result: stepping back from doing things for her team, and instead helping them think through tasks themselves.

The result, she says, is a more efficient, happier kitchen.

What's Next

Erin has her sights set on a role in the food team, supporting sites, developing menus, and working with new managers.

She sees her apprenticeship as foundational to that ambition: from the language and frameworks it’s given her, to the goal-setting tools that keep teams on track.

As for competitions, despite swearing she was done with the stress, she’s already contemplating entering another one.

Utter madness, she admits, with a grin that suggests she knows exactly what she’s doing.

Erin's advice for anyone starting out:

Ask questions. Listen to constructive criticism; it’s there to help you, not belittle you. Trust your gut. Work smarter, not harder. And love what you do. If you love what you do, you’ll never regret turning up to work.

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