Friday, 4 May 2012

85 Years of Inflight Service Celebrated by British Airways

It will be 85 years on 1 May 2012 since the first inflight meal service on a commercial aircraft. Food in the air has come a long way since then. 

In 1927 Imperial Airways (predecessor to British Airways) introduced the Silverwing branded air service on the London to Paris route. The flight offered the first luxury onboard meal service. A male steward dressed in a smart white tunic served just ten passengers on the flight, which took around two hours. 

Onboard was a small cabinet carrying four gills (servings) of whisky, a dozen bottles of lager beer, two siphons of sparkling water and twelve assorted bottles of mineral water. They also carried a packet of sandwiches or biscuits and one or two thermos flasks of hot water, within which the steward made coffee or beef tea to nourish the passengers during the flight. The service represented the height of luxury, up until this time passengers had to fend for themselves, packing homemade snacks for the journey.

85 years on British Airways' cabin crew serve around 100,000 meals a day to customers, often with more than one meal on an individual flight. The airline's 14,000 crew are trained in the art of premium service. They are taught skills which include how to tell a Merlot from a Shiraz, how to cook the perfect scrambled eggs and how to re-create a five star turndown service.

Bill Francis, British Airways' head of inflight service, said: "At British Airways we have an incredible history. We've developed the service to our customers and even as we've grown from small propeller aircraft to 747's, we've managed to maintain the magic that makes flying special."

No comments:

Post a Comment