Me (in the middle) and two of my colleagues, Yvonne and Gunilla |
In the Swedish school law it states that every lunch is to be served free of charge to students from pre-school up to high school. This is something that has been going on since 1945, in the middle of 2011 the government added an amendment to the law that stated the meal should alse be nutritional.
The standard of Swedish school meals are were high and many kitchens has a standard when it comes to there food that is equal to an normal restaurant. If we go back 10 years many of the kitchens served industrial preperd products and the focus wasn´t on the quality. But since then many things have happened and now the best schoolkitchens tend to do as much as they can from scratch.
I´m headchef of a school restaurant in the region of Stockholm, Swedens capitol. The school called Fribergaskolan (Fribergaschool) is for students from the age of 13 to 15, secondary school, and each day we prepare lunch for 500 students. We serve between two to three diffent meals every day. One maincourse, one soup and one vegetarian meal. We have a big buffé with about seven different sallads and we bake our on bread.
The Whole team at Restaurant f |
For us in Sweden it´s easy to forget the conditions for students in other countries. We are previliged to have a system that grants every student with the free meal during school days. A system that only exist in three countries around the world: Sweden, Finland and Estonia. Hopefully more countries will follow this system but in the meanwhile I hope that at least the students that can´t afford to buy there lunch should be offered some kind of meal during the day to give them enough energy to last through the school day. For many that could be the only meal they get, especially in poor countries with lot of poverty.
With that in mind the following discription of what we served our guests today might seem extravagant but since we have our system that has been establiced for so many years it´s possible for us to serve a meal that have restaurant standard. I as headchef has a calculated budget of 9.80:- Swedish crowns (ca 1,06 Euro or 1,2 USD) for each student per day that I can use to by groceries.
The meal we served today is a little bit extra just to celebrate the International school meal day but at the same time not that different from what we normaly serve.
For todays main dish we are serving owenbaked filet of rainbow trout with a roe- and herbsauce and steamboiled small potatoes. The rainbow trout is delivered to us fresh and is farmed in Åland, an island outside of Swedens coast. We make the sauce using sourcreme, creme fraiche, maionnaise, roe, dill, chives, lemonpeppar and salt.
The vegetarian dish this day was stuffed eggplant with a filling of tomatoes and lintels served with a tomatoesauce and steamboiled small potatoes.
Soup of the day was a Potatoe- and leeksoupe. The base for this soup is mashed potateos that was left over from yesterdays serving. A way to reduce waste and reuse leftovers. The soup is made of potatoes, milk, water, butter, leek, salt and peppar.
If you want to see more of what we do we have a facebookpage for the schoolrestaurant. We write everything in swedish so it can be diffucult to understand but we also take a lot of pictures and post them so maybe you can find some inspiration from them. You will find the facebookpage here: Restaurang F
If you won´t to now more and have questions about how we work and and about swedish school meals you can always contact me on my email: hakan.lundholm@edu.danderyd.se . And if you by some reason find yourself visiting Sweden and Stockholm your always welcome to pay us a visit.
Ps. If you wonder what the name of this blogg "Skolkocken" means in english it´s "Schoolchef"
I also have a facebookpage for the blog where you can find my blogposts but I also post links to other interesting things related to food in general and especially school meals.
You can also find posts both on twitter and instagram under the name Skolkocken
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