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Jeremy Clarkson bans customer’s birthday cake from his pub

Published 17:06 25 Nov 2025 GMT

Updated 17:07 25 Nov 2025 GMT

Ava Keady
Jeremy Clarkson bans customer’s birthday cake from his pub

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The Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? presenter had previously banned ketchup from the establishment.

Jeremy Clarkson has banned customer's birthday cakes from his pub, The Farmer's Dog.

The 65-year-old former Top Gear presenter launched the revamped pub in Cotswolds last year near his 1,000-acre, famous, Diddly Squat Farm.

Clarkson holds a passionate '100% British' campaign for the pub, meaning everything he sells uses ingredients within a 16-mile radius of the venue.

Now, such guidelines have extended the local produce rule to customers bringing in their own birthday cakes, which must also be obtained under the same rigid rules.

Consistent I guess...

In his Times column, the Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? host wrote about the struggle of sticking by his rules, using black pepper as an example, admitting that it costs ten times more to buy in the UK than abroad.

“Now, a business-minded person would look at these costs and realise that with British-only rules in place, a hotdog was going be priced at about £45.

“It’s possible that for every customer who comes through the door I’d lose about £10," he explained.

He has previously faced backlash over ketchup not being stocked at his pub due to the fact he couldn’t find a fully UK-sourced one, but was added a short-time later after discovering one from the UK firm Condimaniac.

On the upside, Clarkson has said he believes his dedicated following of customers appreciate his pub for only serving food that has been reared or harvested on his nearby farm.