Children To Learn How to Cook Healthily
A new government incentive to help to teach children about eating a healthy diet, and also teach them to cook for themselves, has been launched. The main purpose is to educated children, so that they are more likely to avoid becoming obese. Head teachers will be able to order a recipe booklet, so that children can prepare meals at home after learning to cook them in class. In addition to the healthy recipe booklet, there is to be an extra £151 million to be invested in food technology (previously home economics lessons) in schools. Once the infrastructure is in place, compulsory cooking lessons will be given to all 11 to 14 year old. The target date is 2011, when it will become compulsory for 11- to 14-year-olds to have food technology lessons, which will include both food nutrition, hygiene and practical cookery lessons.
Ed Balls, the Schools Secretary, believes that everyone should know how to prepare a basic, nutritious meal from raw ingredients. Current attitudes around cooking often suggest that it is actually cool not to know how to cook.
“Too many people just accept they cannot cook or simply do not have time for it. We’ve lost touch with making basic dishes from scratch, even though there has never been a wider range of food in our shops.” Ed Balls, the Schools Secretary, 2008.
However, Ed Balls is quick to remind that schools should only be part of the solution, and that ultimately parents are responsible for ensuring that their children are brought up well, which must now include feeding
them healthily and teaching them how to look after themselves properly. He also reflects on how cooking lessons were done when he was at school, say that “it will be great if young people had the chance to make healthy dishes from basic ingredients at home, not simply in the classroom – as I did when I was growing up.”
Cookery is already compulsory in primary schools, but an option part of home economics in secondary schools. There will be new investments to update 515 secondary schools with the required cooking facilities. Also, the government has allocated £750,000 to recruit and train 800 new “food technology” teachers. Head teachers will be able to order the cookbooks for their Year 7 pupils.
The healthy recipes in the booklet were provided by the public, who were asked to nominate the basic dishes every child should learn how to cook. Recipes are also available online on the Teachernet website. The cookbook has a foreword by top chef Phil Vickery, who says:
“Cooking is a skill and often it is not learned at an early enough age.
Once you can cook the basics you will have the best survival tool in the
box to take you into adult life. Eating good quality meals made from basic
ingredients should be part of everyone’s daily experience and by learning
how to prepare simple and nutritious meals we will make this a reality.” Phil Vickery.
The healthy cooking booklet will include these favourite recipes:
- Apple crumble
- Beef and veggie stew
- Beef curry
- Cheese sauce
- Chicken casserole
- Chicken pasta salad
- Chicken tikka
- Chilli con carne
- Chow mein
- Coleslaw
- Cottage pie
- Crispy potatoes
- Custard
- Fajitas
- Fruit pie
- Hotpot
- Lamb rogan josh
- Leek and potato soup
- Minestrone
- Mushroom risotto
- Paella
- Ragu
- Roast chicken legs
- Savoury rice
- Sizzling stir-fry
- Spaghetti Bolognese
- Speedy potato salad
- Spicy tomato soup
- Summer pudding
- Vegetable curry
- Vegetables
- Vegetarian lasagne
Recommended Reading
• Additives lurk in everyday diets• Action Plan to Lose Weight for BMI 28+ Part 3
• The MotleyHealth Weight Loss Plan: Stage 1 – Preparation
• Scientist criticises government attitude to child obesity
• Obese Kids Say No To Gastric Surgery

Tweet Me!




