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The next chapter of [The City] has been written, but I think it's a very boring chapter. I may go write the following one (or two) too, and then edit them together and see the overall effect.




Jamie's school dinners started yesterday. I really enjoyed the show, as I did with his old show where he trained his chefs for "15".

For those who don't know, Jamie Oliver's a top chef who has become some sort of a celebrity chef. His style is rugged, very "throw everything together and voila" but it really works (I tried). In this show he went to take over the kitchens at a state school and has to cook for hundreds of kids with a very tight budget - 37p per person per meal. That's how much state schools get from the government to feed the kids.

It's a phenomenol challenge, to jump into something like that and trying to make it work on day one. With that sort of budget, the school has no choice but to feed them the shit everyone knows as school food. And if it has one single bit of veg in it, the kids refuse to eat it. What Jamie tries to do in the show is to cook them all healthy food that they'll like, with that sort of a budget.

At one point, what he said really struck me. He complained to a friend after seeing the food the kids were fed with. Processed, reconstituted crap with no nutritional value at all. He said something to the effect of, we've got this government trying to get people to be healthy, we spend all this money on the NHS trying to help people with heart disease, obesity... but look at the sort of shit they feed to our kids. This is where all the problems start! They give you 37p per kid for lunch, what are you supposed to do?

And I thought, fuck, that's so true.

Can't wait for next week's show.

Date: 2005-02-24 09:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yuki-scorpio.livejournal.com
Beans and mash. I had beans and mash too! XD

I'm just glad my family sent me to a private school... the food was much better and even though it's a boarding school meaning everyone was eating school food for nearly every meal for 7 years, there was no obesity in my school that I can remember.

Date: 2005-02-24 11:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ex-semishade366.livejournal.com
Went to state school in the 70s - there wasn't much obesity then (I can remember one, but it didn't have much to do with school dinners). But these days kids have been raised on junk food before they ever set foot in a school. I was only ever allowed sweets on saturdays (20p worth!) and maybe once or twice a week could buy crisps from "missy" in break (2.5p). I can't think of a day when my teenage half brother hasn't had sweets or crisps, not to mention all the sugary drinks. (And what really ticks me off is he's never needed a filling!)

Date: 2005-02-25 12:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yuki-scorpio.livejournal.com
I guess I'm really not in a position to say what's wrong with the kids these days (sometimes I still consider myself a kid -_-), but when I was in school I never ate *that* much, and nor did most of the others there... there was one girl, but her obesity (and appetite) could almost be considered inherited, an isolated case. We all seemed to have had other things to do with our time... comparatively, the hobbies children have now seem to involve a lot of /visual/ stimulation, so they can do it sitting down. And we office workers know sitting down all day = wanting something to munch all day...

Fastfood giants, generally more junk food being available, TV commercials and parents too busy to look after their kids, all of that of course don't help. *sigh*

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