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British Airways cuts Club World meal service for departures after 9pm

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Yesterday we covered the bizarre new breakfast / brunch service that British Airways is serving for lunch on long haul flights departing up to 11.29am.

It pairs a cooked breakfast with wine, a cheeseboard, coffee and liqueurs. Those who have tried it are finding it as odd as it sounds.

On the upside, you are at least still getting a three course meal of sorts. This is no longer the case for Club World departures after 9pm.

BA cuts Club World meal service for departures after 9pm

‘Institutional memory’ is ‘the collective knowledge, experience, and expertise of an organization. It includes the information, processes, best practices, and lessons learned that help an organization function effectively and make informed decisions’.

I mention this because, about 20 years ago, British Airways launched something called ‘Sleeper Service’. It stripped down the Club World business class food service to the bare minimum, on the grounds that most people wanted to sleep on overnight flights and those who didn’t could starve. It was a failure, launching the catchphrase ‘To Fly, To Starve’ and was abandoned. This is despite the fact that it only operated from airports where BA had pre-flight lounge dining.

Multiple rounds of staff departures at British Airways later, everyone who remembers the failure of ‘Sleeper Service’ seems to have left and a version of it is back. This time it is on virtually all routes, irrespective of whether the lounge offers a full meal.

What is now served on Club World departures after 9pm?

The menu has been pared back sharply:

  • appetisers have been scrapped
  • main courses and desserts are massively simplified

Here is an example menu currently in use:

Main courses

  • Butternut squash and coconut soup
  • Grilled tiger prawn salad
  • Chicken and leek pie
  • Cheese and crackers

Dessert

  • Panna cotta
  • Fruit salad
  • Chocolate chip cookies

…. and that’s it.

Bizarrely the menu says at the top:

“Take your pick from an assortment of seasonal dishes. If you’re feeling tired and can’t wait to cosy down, then just choose your main and dessert and a night cap of your choice”.

However, you have no option but to have just a main and dessert because that’s all there is! The appetisers are gone.

This new service has been rolled out on virtually all long-haul routes. The only exceptions are 12+ hour flights. It is, apparently, being used on Cape Town and Mauritius which are over 11 hours.

The airline argues that a ‘one tray’ meal service will allow passengers to get to sleep more quickly. The problem is that British Airways ALREADY offered a stripped down ‘one tray’ option on late night Club World flights. Those who wanted to eat and sleep could have the ‘one tray’ meal whilst those who didn’t could – until last week – have the standard full menu.

It isn’t clear what is offered in First Class. I believe that the menu has also been cut back but bears more resemblance to a proper meal.


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Comments (486)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Wis says:

    Classic case of a business pointing in different directions. On the one hand, recognising the shift in market dynamics, there is the growth of IAG Loyalty and BA Holidays, clearly targeting the relatively affluent leisure customer to fill the gap left by fewer business travellers. They are influencing new routes and aiming to sell aspiration with the flight experience being part of the holiday. Unfortunately no one told the BA product team.

  • Dominic Barrington says:

    Do we have any definitive word on what is happening in First after this new ‘watershed’? And I am still not clear how a complaint can be made to BA about this concept of this, if one does not have a specific booking and PNR…

  • Maisie Presley says:

    Excellent

  • Lana says:

    BA has slowly and steadily been earning their deserved reputation as one of the worst Airlines now to fly with. The service can he poor from exceptionally slow check in at Airports to awful food choices and badly designed Cabins in Business. With Avios and Executive Club companion tickets being used more and more, it’s no longer relatively exclusive and BA have no need to treat passengers to any loyalty for flying with them.

  • zapato1060 says:

    How likely or unlikely are we ever to see the 241 used on AY or QR?

    • Rob says:

      Qatar negotiations fell through. To a lot of destinations its about the same price anyway, eg Oz is 180k on Qatar, BA its 290/340k.

    • ashic says:

      @zapato1060 Given the taxes and surcharges, probably need to calculate if QR without 241 is *that* much more expensive.

  • Simon says:

    Are BA forgetting that not all passengers in club are business travellers? Some of us travel in premium cabins for leisure and fund our own travel. If I’m paying £6-8k for 2 club world tickets to make our holiday extra special then I expect the full premium experience.

    • Chris says:

      Not just leisure travellers. My next CW return to JFK on business was nearly £9k return. I’m not sure that it’s particularly unreasonable of me to expect proper catering choices for that amount of cash, regardless of who is paying.

      I’m in the fortunate position of being in J or F a fair bit (like many others around these parts, I know).

      Sometimes at work’s expense, sometimes at my own (cash) expense and sometimes in return for Avios. In all of those situations, I can assure you that I would find a lack of appropriate catering (or at least the ability to avail myself of it if I choose to do so) equally as unacceptable!

      • Toilet Paper Man says:

        I’m in a very similar situation, fly to North America a lot but work only allows BA.

        My workaround is to just fly BA codeshares. I can fly J on AA , or a handful of other airlines, but my tickets show as a BA Flight number so work accepts it!

  • Kevin Connolly says:

    This is a grave mistake by BA because it takes away passenger choice whether to eat or not & with price of tickets as they are this move can only be seen as a cost a cost saving measure.

  • Opus says:

    Is this club world departures out of Heathrow or out of any airport after 9pm?

    Nonetheless this is bottom barrel BS. Jesus Christ

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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