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VIDEO: Salmon Arm culinary students picking up life skills in the kitchen

High school recognized for local farm-to-school initiatives and restructured, values-based program

Students at Salmon Arm Secondary鈥檚 Sullivan campus are getting a taste of working in a commercial kitchen, with an emphasis on fresh, farm-to-table ingredients.

Not only is Sullivan鈥檚 culinary teacher, Chef Nimmi Erasmus, changing the structure of the school鈥檚 cafeteria and foods classes, she has been invited to participate in B.C.鈥檚 first Farm to School conference May 18-19. The conference gathers people from the food service and farming industries, among others, who work to bring local and sustainable healthy food options to students in school settings.

Erasmus said Sullivan is one of the only high schools in B.C. to be invited and she will represent Salmon Arm as well as the hard work of high school culinary programs in general. She will be attending along with chefs and culinary and farm professionals, all sharing what their respective spaces are doing to foster farm-to-school initiatives, bringing locally grown and sustainable foods into schools.

鈥淲e鈥檙e being recognized for the food that is coming out of this cafeteria because it鈥檚 all pretty much farm-fresh, and we do close to zero-waste鈥 said Erasmus. 鈥淪o you鈥檒l see those kinds of products being used. We try to support as many farms as we can, and support as local as we can.鈥

The conference is being held to educate and share ideas, said Erasmus, so she is honoured to be recognized along with local farm-to-school and food action representatives who helped get the program noticed.

Erasmus is a 2003 Sullivan grad and said when she took the culinary program then, the training and food structure was very different.

One of the first things she did upon taking over the program was remove the kitchen deep fryer. If anything needs to be fried, it is done in a pot of oil on the stove in better view of passersby, said Erasmus, emphasizing an open-concept kitchen. Fries are baked and everything is made from scratch, she confirmed, adding the students rarely use recipes and simply follow her instruction, encouraged to make sauces, soups and almost everything else as they go.

The culinary arts class is an elective, but Erasmus said she has restructured it so it prepares students to go into culinary careers if they choose to. Six or seven students went to culinary school after graduation last year, she estimated, stating proudly that it speaks volumes for the program.

鈥淚t鈥檚 sort of my personal mission for them to learn and attain life skills. These are all transferable skills, everything they learn in here.鈥

She added the culinary craft is a mix of school subjects.

鈥淵ou need math, you need science, but you need creativity, you need art.鈥

The students run the show in Erasmus鈥 class. They begin with a few weeks of training, focusing on safety and knife skills, then handle the different kitchen stations, taking turns being sous chef and kitchen leader and delegating tasks to each other. After three weeks running each station, when Erasmus is confident they鈥檝e mastered those skills, they move on.

Erasmus said it鈥檚 an escape for a lot of students from more academic courses, and often students on a break between classes will drop in to help or hang out and can be 鈥渁 god-send鈥 when the lunch service gets busy.

That service, beginning with popular breakfast buns and finishing when the kitchen sells out of it鈥檚 lunch feature, can net the cafeteria nearly $700 a day, said Erasmus. On Wednesday, May 10, the cafe opened its doors at 11:45 a.m. and sold out of Vietnamese b谩nh m矛 sandwiches and paninis by 12:15 p.m.

Erasmus said she wants to teach her students more than just testable content, designing the program around values and hard work on top of specific skills.

鈥淐ooking is a lifestyle,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 wanted my students to know what the essence is, from receiving the ingredient to cooking it, to plating and serving it. It鈥檚 all an act of love.鈥

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rebecca.willson@saobserver.net

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32701150_web1_230517-SAA-farm-to-school-group_1
Salmon Arm Sullivan culinary arts students Andrew Steinward, Cayl Cooper and Oliver Thibeault (left to right in back) and Logan Moldowan, Chef Nimmi Erasmus, culinary assistant Annette and students Ziana Mickleson and Logan Costain (left to right, front) after a busy and fast cafeteria lunch rush Wednesday, May 10, 2023. (Rebecca Willson/ Salmon Arm Observer)


Rebecca Willson

About the Author: Rebecca Willson

I took my first step into the journalism industry in November 2022 when I moved to Salmon Arm to work for the Observer and Eagle Valley News. I graduated with a journalism degree in December 2021 from MacEwan University in Edmonton.
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