Kickstarter helps Nana’s Cafe re-launch in Clapton

Bernadette Taylor

Bernadette Taylor, “Chief Nana” Pic: Hugh McCafferty/ ELL

Nana’s  cafe, a social enterprise for older women, will open next month in permanent premises thanks to Kickstarter funding.

We first wrote about Nana’s a year ago when it was a pop-up at the Elderfield pub. Now it will re-open in Brooksby’s Walk in a move engineered by the very  women who the cafe  brought together.

The new premises will allow Nana’s to grow and offer opportunities to older women who are far from ready to put their feet up and have a lot of knowledge to share.

The cafe is the brainchild of local resident Katie Harris, 28, who said last year that it aimed to bring generations together over “simple, classic good food, done well, at a good price”. On the menu are breakfast favourites like egg and soldiers and scrambled egg on toast, then lunches will be sandwiches on plain white or brown bread, salads and a soup of the day, plus traditional teatime cakes.

 

“It’s a partnership. Individual ‘nanas’ join up and every three months we’ll release a percentage of the profits and it gets divided up depending on how many hours they’ve worked. The idea is that people can use it as a nice little earner.

“We’re asking for one day a week at first, we’ll see how much time people have because it turns out old ladies are very busy!”

As a precursor to NANA, last year Katie set up a venture called ‘The Amazings’, seeking to find retired people with skills that could be turned into marketable activities or products of which they would keep 70 per cent of the profits. She was inspired to set up the projects after designing similar schemes for the public sector for the last five years. Whilst Katie does some occasional freelance work, the majority of her time is spent on NANA.

In the face of overwhelming negativity towards the ‘ageing population’, she saw the huge potential in older people who have motivation and do not want to be “passive receivers of services”.

Katie said: “That’s how I met Bernadette – she was an amazing crocheter and knitter. She made all the aprons for NANA. One of the things I noticed was a lot of the women were applying to do something with cooking, but didn’t have the confidence to run a class.

“There are also a lot of soft skills with older ladies, not just making the best sponge, not everyone who joins NANA needs to be a cook. It’s more of that nurturing quality that only a Nana really has.”

‘Chief Nana’, 66-year-old Bernadette Taylor is active within NANA and at home.

She said: “On a day-to-day basis I do a lot of sewing. I also cook for my grandchildren since they only live 10 doors away. I love getting the generations together. There’s such a gap, especially when people move away from their families. I think it’s really exciting.”

Bernadette highlights the value of having nurturing nanas around: “One of the things I can remember from when my children were younger was never drinking a hot cup of tea and never eating a hot meal, because as soon as the food’s ready the children needed something. So to have someone who can occupy your children while you drink a hot cup of tea, that’s gold dust.”

But it is not only for parents to take their children for some quiet time outside the house. Teacher Hannah Reynolds from nearby Rushmore Primary School said she’ll “come at least once a week to escape the chaos”.

Giving the last word on the benefit of NANA, Bernadette said: “Everyone’s got something to learn and something to share.”

NANA’s website

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