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Tuesday, 19 May 2015

Ralph McFarlane wins the Pumpkin competition

Ralph McFarlane in Room 13 was the proud winner of our pumpkin competition with an exact guess of 27 kilograms, for the combined weight of our two big pumpkins. Zara Munro, Jonathan Rapson, Ella McMillan and Ralph worked flat out last Thursday afternoon to get the pumpkin soup ready. Friday of last week was a suitably chilly day for soup, so with the help of some of our senior boys, we just about managed to feed the whole school with some delicious soup. Pretty good going to be able to do that with those two big pumpkins! Well done to Ralph and his team of chefs. I know you made lots of people happy on a cold, wet day.

Here's the recipe

Ralph’s Pumpkin Soup Recipe

Any type of pumpkin
2 Carrots
1 Leek
1 large or 2 small potatoes
Milk or cream
2 Vegetable stock cubes or Oxo
Cayenne pepper, ground coriander, curry powder - optional
Salt and Pepper
Butter

Chop up the pumpkin, or even better drop it on the ground and watch it break apart.
Wash the pumpkin pieces if you’ve dropped it on the ground.
Scoop out all the seeds and save them in a bowl.
Drizzle some olive oil over the pumpkin.
Roast the pumpkin on a baking tray (skin and all).
Wash the rest of the vegetables and then chop them up.
While the pumpkin is roasting fry the chopped veggies in a little bit of butter until soft.
When the pumpkin has gone soft and a little bit brown take it out of the oven and leave it to cool.
When it has cooled cut the skin off the pumpkin and chop the roasted pumpkin up into small pieces
Mix up the vegetable stock.
Add the fried veggies, roasted pumpkin, vegetable stock, salt and pepper (and spices if you’re using them) to a large pot
Put a lid on the pot and let it simmer.
While this happening wash the pumpkin seeds and put them in between paper towels to dry.
When all the veggies are soft add the milk or cream.
Use a stick blender or food processor to puree all the pieces so the soup is nice and smooth.
Taste and add more salt, pepper and spices if you like.

Enjoy steaming hot with lovely crusty bread.


Warming up the Pumpkin Soup

Getting ready for the serving

Lots of hungry students ready for their soup. 

Brad and Tim helping serve up the soup to the masses 

Snotty green vegetables, Frog's legs and Snails

As well as hosting our  Community Cooking Evening, Chris Fortune from Kids Can Cook ran cooking workshops with all of our Year 2-8 students last Wednesday. I saw the students having a great time, and they really enjoyed eating Chris’ “green snotty vegetables”. They learnt about New Zealand Kai and food from around the world, including Frogs Legs and Snails and they got to sample some of Chris’s crepes. It was fabulous to see so many of our students giving the crepes the ‘thumbs up’! If you’d like to have a go at recreating the dish at home here’s the recipe:

Apple and Silver Beet Crepes
1 Cup Flour
1.5 cups of milk
2 eggs
Apples, Grated
Silverbeet or Spinach, Washed

Mix milk and eggs, whisk into flour and leave to rest for 20 mins.  If it is too thick thin with a little milk. Ladle into crepe pans and cook until golden brown, leave to cool. Mix Apple and thinly sliced silver beet together,  and roll up into a tight cylinder. Slice and serve cold or heat by placing in the oven with a little cheese over the top.  

Lauren at the community Cooking Evening having a go at flipping the crepes

Chris in action
Natalie and Claudia (or is it Lillian?) taking a few tips on Chris's tasting technique

Lots of eager tasters


Tuesday, 28 April 2015

Oaklands School Pumpkin Competition





Here's a sneak preview of the Pumpkin Competition that's going to be launched next week Good luck!

Tuesday, 14 April 2015

A recent news article in The Southern View about us winning the School Lions Environment Award

  • Article rank 
  • 23 Mar 2015
  • Southern View

Pupils pick up award for school garden

FRESH PRODUCE: Oaklands School pupil Yarek Kurochkin holds a selection of produce harvested from the school’s vegetable garden, which received the Lions School Environment Award. The school started planning and developing the garden last year and the produce has been used to make nutritious meals for the pupils. Halswell Menz Shed and Mitre 10 Mega Hornby, were among some of the businesses which supported the school’s campaign. The school has now started developing a food forest and have chickens which the year 4 pupils care for.

Compulsory Food Education in Schools and Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution Day


The Garden to Table trust have published an interesting article supporting the petition Jamie Oliver has started to force governments across the world to introduce compulsory food education in schools. Garden to Table mention some of the many benefits of food education in schools and they've very kindly included a link to this blog.

Here's a copy of the article or you can follow the link above to read it.

FIGHT OBESITY: “Teach food literacy in schools” says charity

FIGHT OBESITY: “Teach food literacy in schools” says charity
The Garden to Table Trust is urging The Government to invest in the development of gardening and cooking food skills to fight obesity in New Zealand.
The trust also says New Zealand needs to show international leadership by providing serious support for in-school skills based food education.
Garden to Table founding trustee, Catherine Bell says New Zealand needs to take its place alongside England, Brazil, Mexico and Japan in implementing a curriculum-based food literacy programme.
The Trust supports celebrity chef Jamie Oliver’s recent initiative global change.org challenging all countries to introduce compulsory food education in schools.
“Jamie Oliver’s global petition urging all governments to offer food education for all children in the world is raising awareness of this need, and we encourage New Zealanders to sign it.
“As well, we call on government to work across health and education sectors to develop visionary policy around food literacy with a particular focus on improving outcomes for all children and young people,” urges Ms Bell
Executive Officer of Garden to Table, Anne Barrowclough says schools offering the Garden to Table programme continually comment on the range of benefits an embedded food education programme provides.
“For example, we hear that attendance is always good on Garden to Table days, team work and problem solving skills are developed, and language skills improve, especially for those for whom English is a second language.
“We get feedback from volunteers about cooperation, depth of knowledge and interest in environment and fresh food; and from parents about practical skills that are coming home, the enthusiasm to try new vegetables, to suggest new recipes.
“The blogs from Edendale and Oaklands schools tell the story.”
Ms Barrowclough says a curriculum integrated, in-school programme such as Garden to Table is more than just understanding how to make food choices.
“It’s actually about empowering children with a hands-on lesson, full of practical skill development focused on how to action those choices – what you need to grow your own tomatoes, how you follow a recipe, how to cook from fresh ingredients. It also adds immediacy and relevance to science and maths concepts.
“Learning is about more than telling, it is about experiencing, active engagement and interaction.”
Ms Bell says she now sees clearly that Garden to Table has the potential to change the attitudes and habits of whole future generations.
“It enables children to learn skills and have experiences that will influence and inform the rest of their lives and positively impact outcomes across their education, health and social development as well give them respect for others and the natural world.
“Garden to Table will, without doubt, have a major and hugely positive impact on the increasingly worrying cycle of health related illness, violence, poverty and lack of achievement that is evident today across this country.”
Jamie Oliver is petitioning the governments of G20 countries to introduce food education programmes in their nations' schools. He says humanity is facing a global obesity epidemic, with 42 million children under the age of five either overweight or obese across the world.
About the Garden to Table Trust
The Garden to Table Trust was established in 2009 as a registered charity, to facilitate a programme, delivered in New Zealand primary schools, focussed on food education for children aged between seven and 10. They have the opportunity to participate in practical, hands-on, child centric classes that teach them how to grow, harvest, prepare and share fresh, seasonal produce. .
The Trust’s curriculum integrated programme educates children about food, horticulture and their natural environment. Students work in small groups under the supervision of specialist staff, community volunteers and their teachers,
Consequently they learn about the environment and sustainability and enrich their curriculum subjects through hands-on, interactive learning. The programme also has many positive spin-offs for family and community life.
The Trust, co-founded by food writer Catherine Bell, was modelled on Australia’s well documented Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Programme. Seven years on, the Garden to Table programme now supports 30 schools across the country, providing the opportunity for over 4000 children every week to engage in this practical programme.
Issued for the Garden to Table Trust by Pead PR

Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution



Listen to Jamie Oliver talk about the petition he has started. He hopes to encourage governments to teach food education as a compulsory part of the curriculum, to help reduce levels of obesity and Diabetes in children.

Monday, 16 March 2015

Miss Collin's class had fun in the sun - and the sprinkler!

Miss Collin's class had a wonderful time out in the garden last Friday afternoon. It was one of those rare Canterbury days, when it was stinking hot and there was very little wind. Usually the NE wind takes the edge off the temperatures. Miss Collins and her students enjoyed making new plants from old, and potting up the strawberry runners. By the end of it, we had 25 brand new plants which will be ready for filling in the gaps on our strawberry mound later in the year. As one of the students said "Who doesn't love strawberries? You can never have enough." Well said - I totally agree with you. They then cooled off in the garden sprinkler, and enjoyed a tomato to snack on, on their way back to class! What a great Friday afternoon.

Matt getting stuck into the potting mix 


Nice job Baxter


Great to see Niamh firming down her cuttings...
...and helping her classmates wash their hands


Danny concentrating hard