A government minister has praised the growing movement towards freshly prepared school meals during a visit to a London secondary school showcasing scratch-cooking in action.Hosted in partnership with the Craft Guild of Chefs, the visit offered a first-hand look at how trained catering teams are moving away from processed foods to serve nutritious dishes cooked on-site from raw ingredients. Against a backdrop of rising concern over child health, ultra-processed foods and the cost of living, the minister’s tour highlighted how investment in skills, facilities and chef-led school kitchens can transform the daily diets of pupils-and what that might mean for the future of school food policy nationwide.
Government minister observes scratch cooking in London classroom kitchens
Amid the clatter of pans and the aroma of simmering sauces, the visiting minister traded the usual Westminster backdrop for a hands-on tour of London’s classroom kitchens. Pupils in chef whites demonstrated how they turn fresh, seasonal ingredients into balanced meals, guided by school catering teams and members of the Craft Guild of Chefs. The minister moved from workstation to workstation, quizzing young cooks on knife skills, food provenance and menu planning, while teachers outlined how cooking lessons are being woven into the curriculum to support both nutrition and life skills.
Throughout the visit, officials were shown how school kitchens can operate as live training environments rather than simply meal service points. Demonstrations highlighted key elements of the program:
- Fresh readiness of sauces, soups and breads each morning
- Seasonal menus aligned to government school food standards
- Zero-waste techniques that repurpose trimmings and leftovers
- Skills mentoring by professional chefs partnered with teaching staff
| Dish | Main Ingredients | Skills Shown |
|---|---|---|
| Herb Roast Chicken Traybake | Chicken, root veg, fresh herbs | Butchery, roasting, seasoning |
| Tomato & Lentil Ragu | Lentils, tomatoes, carrots | Knife work, slow cooking, layering flavour |
| Wholemeal Flatbreads | Flour, yeast, olive oil | Dough mixing, proving, pan-baking |
Chefs and pupils showcase fresh ingredients seasonal menus and culinary skills
In bustling classroom kitchens more akin to professional brigades than school facilities, young cooks worked shoulder to shoulder with experienced chefs to turn crates of produce into vibrant, from-scratch dishes. Stainless-steel tables were lined with bowls of crisp vegetables, aromatic herbs and high-welfare meats, all sourced to underline the value of provenance and seasonality. Under the calm guidance of their mentors, pupils weighed, chopped and seared with an assurance that impressed the visiting minister, who moved between workstations to quiz them on flavour balance, knife safety and the environmental impact of their ingredient choices.
The practical lesson extended beyond recipes to the structure of a modern, nutritious school offer, with staff explaining how daily menus are planned to be both appealing and sustainable. On the wall,a sample rotation illustrated how autumnal produce anchors the week’s choices:
- Hands-on preparation of vegetables and sauces,made in-house from raw ingredients.
- Clear links between classroom learning and real-world hospitality careers.
- Reduced food waste through careful menu design and smart use of leftovers.
| Day | Seasonal Main | Key Skill Practised |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | Roasted root vegetable bake | Knife work & roasting |
| Wednesday | Herb chicken with barley | Pan-searing & deglazing |
| Friday | Tomato & lentil ragù | Sauce making & seasoning |
Impact of scratch cooked school meals on pupil health behaviour and attainment
During the visit, the Minister observed how freshly prepared lunches are quietly reshaping daily habits in the dining hall. Plates laden with colourful vegetables, wholegrains and lean proteins are not only replacing ultra-processed options, they are also normalising healthier choices among pupils who might otherwise skip meals or rely on convenience food. Teachers report that children who used to arrive in afternoon lessons tired and distracted now demonstrate improved focus and steadier energy levels. Informal feedback from pupils highlights a growing curiosity about ingredients and cooking techniques, with many asking for recipes to recreate dishes at home, reinforcing positive behaviour beyond the school gates.
This shift in the kitchen is also reflected in the classroom. School leaders at the London site shared emerging internal data suggesting a link between consistent access to nutritious, scratch-cooked lunches and better attendance, fewer visits to the school nurse and more engaged learning. Staff note particular benefits for pupils from low-income households, who gain reliable access to balanced meals that support concentration and emotional regulation. Key observed outcomes include:
- Improved concentration in afternoon lessons
- Calmer classroom behaviour after lunch breaks
- Higher participation in group work and creative tasks
- Increased willingness to try new fruits, vegetables and grains
| Measure | Before scratch cooking | After scratch cooking |
|---|---|---|
| Afternoon lesson focus* | Moderate | Consistently high |
| Healthy meal uptake | Low-medium | High |
| Snack vending visits | Frequent | Occasional |
*Based on teacher reports from the pilot school.
Policy recommendations to expand chef led training and fresh food standards in schools
Industry leaders are urging ministers to turn today’s photo prospect into long-term change by backing a national framework that embeds professional cookery skills in every school kitchen. This would include ring‑fenced funding for chef‑led CPD programmes, time allowances for staff to attend training, and incentives for schools that move from processed to fresh, scratch‑cooked menus. Stakeholders are also calling for clear procurement guidance that prioritises seasonal British produce, plus menu standards that reward creativity, cultural diversity and nutritional balance rather than volume and convenience.
To support headteachers and caterers, sector bodies propose a coordinated set of measures that align education, health and agriculture policies. These include:
- National accreditation for school kitchens meeting fresh food benchmarks.
- Partnership grants for collaborations between schools and professional chefs.
- Curriculum links that connect cookery sessions with food education and STEM subjects.
- Data reporting on meal quality, food waste and pupil uptake to track progress.
| Policy Area | Recommended Action |
|---|---|
| Training | Fund chef mentors for regional school clusters |
| Standards | Set minimum fresh ingredient targets per menu cycle |
| Procurement | Prioritise local, seasonal and sustainably sourced produce |
| Monitoring | Publish annual reports on school meal quality indicators |
The Conclusion
As the visit drew to a close, the minister praised the school’s catering team and underscored the wider meaning of what he had seen: a practical exhibition of how scratch-cooked meals can support both pupil wellbeing and national health priorities.
For the Craft Guild of Chefs, the occasion served as a timely reminder that school kitchens are not merely service outlets, but vital training grounds where food values, skills and standards are established early. With continued government engagement and industry support, advocates hope that the model on show in this London school can be replicated more widely – ensuring that freshly prepared, nutritious food becomes the norm rather than the exception in education settings across the country.