Monday 27 October 2008

School Dinners

This is a topic that is very current in the UK at the moment. Jamie Oliver is the high profile figurehead of a campaign that has been waged over the last few years to improve school meals (shockingly, less was being spent on school meals than on prison meals – and in both cases we are talking considerably less than a pound a meal total spend). The government has increased funding and parents are being encouraged to opt for school dinners rather than giving their kids money to buy chips and chocolate for lunch. A good deal of the credit for this goes to hard working real dinner ladies like Jeannette Orrey, who provided the genuinely concerned but perhaps somewhat over exposed Essex lad with his inspiration.

Simon's experience: When I started school in Australia, things were different. We didn't have school dinners, we had a "tuckshop" (stop giggling) twice (?) a week, staffed by volunteers. Orders had to written on a brown paper bag inside which were the few cents needed to pay for lunch, to be handed in before school so the sandwiches could be made by 12.00. I can only remember two types of sandwiches; Coon Cheese and tomato sauce (i.e. ketchup), or devon and tomato sauce. On white bread, of course.

Susan's experience: I went to a primary school that only had 22 pupils. I remember we had a regular dose of a half pint bottle of milk, unrefrigerated and disgusting (and completely pointless, as I and probably every other pupil lived in a household that kept a house cow). Once in high school I too had a tuckshop a couple of times a week, run by the mums and supplied by the local baker and grocer. The most desirable item I seem to remember was a sweet log shaped fruit bun with pink icing sprinkled with coconut known as a coffee roll (I was never that excited by them, but I was a southerner and presumably didn't understand).

In France, naturally, it's a whole different ball game (or so it appears to outsiders – but there are plenty of stories of French people unable to face certain classics of the cantine in later life.)

Every Monday morning you can see parents dropping their children off at school and then checking the noticeboard by the gates. This is where the schools paste up the week's menu for the perusal of all interested parties - quite what course of action is available to a parent if they don't like what they are reading we are not sure. The menus look pretty appealing, although occasionally rather challenging as kid's menus (look at some of the entrées and count how many children of your acquaintance would happily tuck into cucumber or grapefruit).

The menu from the State Primary school in Preuilly-sur-Claise
Translated, the kids are having:

Monday – Pizza; Roast Chicken with green beans; some mysterious item called Kiri; and a banana.
Tuesday - Oak Leaves (whatever they might be); pan-fried pork and a tomato, aubergine, peppers and zucchini stew; and a plain chocolate yoghurt cake.
Thursday – Cucumber; Burgundian purée with milk (whatever can this be?); cheese; an apple.
Friday – Grapefruit; Fish Cube; pasta with tomato; camembert cheese; a sort of caramel blancmange that comes in an individual jelly mould shaped pot and is a classic of the French school cantine, featuring in a practice known as 'gobage de flamby', which I imagine is ruthlessly discouraged by those in authority.


At the private Catholic primary school, they were having:

Monday – coleslaw / corn and tomato salad; turkey casserole with a white sauce; steamed potatoes; cheese; chocolate mousse / fruit.
Tuesday – Potato and Strasbourg sausage salad / some other sort of salad; Moussaka (i.e. the Greek dish of layered minced lamb, aubergine and white sauce); cheese; plain natural yoghurt / fruit.
Thursday – 'Greek style' mushrooms (i.e. fried then braised in white wine and lemon juice with a bit of tomato paste and some herbs and spices, served cold) / Garlic (salami style) sausage; chicken kebabs; carrots sweated with celery and onion, then dressed with cream; cheese; chocolate tart / fruit.
Friday – tomatoes garnished in some unspecified way / broccoli in an oil and vinegar dressing; Nice (as in the place in the south of France) style tuna steak (i.e. with tomatoes, black olives, garlic and anchovies); pasta; cheese; cream dessert / fruit.

What do the poor little souls get to eat on Wednesdays I hear you ask? They only have a half day school on Wednesday, so they go home for lunch.

For comparison, here is a menu from an exemplar primary school in England (good menu too, but interesting how different it is – far less fruit and dairy, but all three schools serve fish on Friday):

Monday – Chicken Bites and gravy, new potatoes, seasonal vegetables; brioche topped with apple and chocolate sauce.
Tuesday – Venison burger in a wholemeal roll, potato salad, mixed salad; pineapple pavlova.
Wednesday – Roast gammon and pineapple, mashed potato, seasonal vegetables; magic chocolate pudding and custard.
Thursday – Pizza topped with mushroom, onion and tomato, new potatoes, seasonal vegetables; peaches in jelly.
Friday – Breaded fish, jacket potato wedges, seasonal vegetables; strawberry tart and cream.

All three schools will serve bread with every meal.

Susan and Simon

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

These school menus look good, though the proof is in the eating. Back in my high school days, the cafeteria food was not good, no matter what you called it. We came up with our own names for most of the meals.

We recently looked into a French village school’s dining room (the word “cafeteria” did not spring to mind) with the tables already set for lunch with glassware, good plates, and napkins. We heard that a teacher sits at the table with the young kids and shows etiquette, use of utensils, how to cut cheeses, suitable table conversation. A good way to civilize kids, it seems to me.

Jus and Deb said...

I went to the BSP (British School of Paris) and always remember having great food, so civilised to have 3 courses!
I think your mystery items could be:
Kiri - the cheese 'Vache Qui rit'
Feuille de chene - lettuce
Bourguignon puree - beef bourguignon with mashed potatoes
and I think the cucumber is the lovely shredded variety with a creamy sauce - yum!
Oh yes,I have fond memories of french school dinners, however it made the afternoon lessons quite a challenge!

Betty Carlson said...

I don't know about the "feuilles de chêne" either...??? Maybe it's a regional thing.

When I was a primary school parent, it seems moms (mainly) and dads (very occasionally) were interested in the menus so they could "balance" what they were serving in the evening with what the child had eaten in the afternoon.

Unfortunately, I've found that the food quality goes down a notch in "collège" and even a bit further in "lycée," where the cantines are serving food to hundreds or thousands...

Katarina said...

Feuille de chêne are not the 'real oak leaves' but a kind of lettuce with brown or green leaves and 'oak leaf' shape, you can find it in all groceries.
Kiri is a variety of 'Vache qui rit' - I think they taste the same but the shape of Kiri is rectangular and 'Vache qui rit' is triangular. The name is derivated from prononciation. It seems that children love both of them.
My canteen (in Slovakia) was disgusting, I always hated it and nothing could be equal to my mum's cuisine. Now I don't like it but it's the fastest way to eat and french canteens are quite acceptable.

Simon said...

I am so glad Susan and I blog - we learn so much from all your comments.

I will have to investigate Kiri. I have tried Vache Qui Rit blue cheese spread (great on toasted baguette) which I originally bought so I could photograph it for the blog.

We should have guessed about feuille de chene, which we actually do eat. We have also photo'd that for the blog (a really early post).

When I was teaching English in Korea we always ate at the canteen with the students. There, it was more a case of the students teaching the teachers how to act properly. The food was interesting in a way that restaurant Korean food wasn't! As for renaming it, most the names we came up with aren't fit for a family forum. (Having saud that, the word verification for this comment is "croapplu")

Simon

Jenny said...

This was so interesting. I was very very fortunate in my early school years (during early 80s)as the small town in Texas I went to elementary school in had a staff of local grannies who would cook ala stove top and not the frozen reheated variety a lot of American cafeterias now provide. The meals were always so good and the homemade desserts (apple pie, cobbler, and chocolate cake with frosting from scratch) even better. I won't forget visiting my youngest step-daughter for lunch when she was in Kindergarten (she is now 10) and observing the sad state of cafeteria lunches. An overheated corn dog (is this strictly American, a weiner on a stick covered in cornbread), mushy cold flavorless heap of Spinash (no child dare touch it or acknowledge it's existence on the tray), tater tots (the one item that was completely eaten on each tray) and a cup of vanilla ice cream. oh, my. But today the small town cafeteria they go to offers tastier fare: Spaghetti and meat sauce, green beans, tossed salad, peaches, and a garlic stick. Or I can only hope it is tastier.

Anonymous said...

Great menu. Four-courses. Thats another thing comparing to oatporridge.

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