Park Royal Dim Sum Manufacturer Fined for Hygiene Failures


Royal Gourmet's premises found to be pest-ridden


Royal Gourmet's facility in Park Royal

March 6, 2025

A large Chinese food manufacturer in Park Royal has been hit with a large fine after a string of serious hygiene safety lapses.

On 4 March, Uxbridge Magistrates’ Court heard that frozen food manufacturer Hypergood Ltd of Coronation Road, trading as Royal Gourmet, pleaded guilty to 11 offences.

It was ordered to pay £113,415 after years of non-compliance with food safety and hygiene rules. This was made up of fines of £9,091 per offence, along with a victim surcharge of £2,000 and costs of £11,450.

The size of the fine reflects years of and ignored interventions from Ealing Council, scaling up from informal advice to formal warnings, and, ultimately, being instructed to stop food production altogether, following a failed inspection in 2022.

As a business supplying Chinese-style meat and dairy products – including steamed buns, siu mai, wontons, dessert buns, and roasted duck – to its own Royal China group of restaurants and speciality supermarkets, Hypergood Ltd is classified as an ‘approved establishment’.

That means that it must follow more stringent legal rules because of the high-risk and large-scale nature of its work.

Since 2022, food safety inspectors have visited Hypergood Ltd a total of 22 times. It was only found to be compliant with legal requirements on 6 of those occasions.

Despite receiving many hours of support from council officers, and efforts to educate the business to make it aware of the risks, the court heard that Hypergood Ltd continued to operate with little regard to basic food hygiene requirements

During three consecutive, unannounced inspections between May 2023 and January 2024, the council’s food safety team discovered serious breaches, such as poor temperature control, inadequate cleaning, and damaged equipment. Mouse droppings were found throughout food preparation rooms.

The business eventually had its approval suspended in 2022, which prevented it from producing food because of the immediate risks to consumers.

The court heard that Hypergood Ltd was prosecuted by Thames Water in 2019 for allowing oily factory waste to enter a sewer near the river Brent for almost a year. It pleaded guilty to 20 breaches of the Water Industry Act 1991 and was ordered by magistrates to pay a total of more than £332,000.

Councillor Kamaljit Nagpal, the council’s cabinet member for decent living incomes, said, “Food businesses have a responsibility to protect their customers by applying the highest possible safety standards to their operations. If they fail to do so, it can pose a serious health risk to the public.

“As one of the boroughs with the highest number of food manufacturers in the UK, our outstanding food safety team is actively supporting businesses to maintain high standards. We always take the strongest possible action against the minority of businesses that break the rules and needlessly put consumers at risk. As part of that promise, we welcome this decision from the court to hold this business accountable.”

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