His interview, significantly, was published in Chelsea Village magazine, which is distributed to season ticket holders and local businesses and is published "on behalf of " Bates by the Illustrated London News Group.
Taylor added: "We have used Chelsea for dinners before and it's hard not to be impressed.
"When you take a customer out for dinner in London, what you see is what you get, but hospitality at Stamford Bridge means looking out on the pitch and being part of a massive football history. It adds a new dimension."
Taylor said he was introduced to Bates by a "mutual friend" - former Tory cabinet minister and Standard Sport columnist David Mellor.
He grew up watching Chelsea's successful cup-winning sides of the early Seventies, but said his business commitments now only allow him to attend about six or seven games a season.
Taylor told Chelsea Village of a trip to see the club beat Manchester United away last season: "I flew up to watch the 3-0 win at Old Trafford before Christmas which is just about as good as it gets."
A former banker who worked at NatWest until two years ago, Taylor admitted Rotch was far from being a household name.
He said: "We are low profile because we are private and we are private because we are happy to stay low profile."