Fredericton school takes local approach to meals - Action News
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New Brunswick

Fredericton school takes local approach to meals

A new school year at Fredericton's Centre Communautaire St. Anne is underway and both students and patrons of the centre will have the option of eating healthier and eating more local foods.

School cafeteria buys local

12 years ago
Duration 2:11
A new school year at the Centre Communautaire St. Anne is underway and both students and patrons of the centre will have the option of eating healthier and eating more local foods

A new school year at Fredericton's Centre Communautaire Sainte-Anne is underway and both students and patrons of the centre will have the option of eating healthier and eating more local foods.

The centre's new head chef Ren Thriault was brought in to develop a new, healthier approach in the facility's kitchen.

The multi-purpose centre includes 1300 students from bothcole Sainte-Anne high school andcole des Batisseurs grade school, a French library, a daycare and a few other businesses.

Prepackaged foods are out. The goal for the new menu isto have 30 per centlocal ingredients, with healthier meals produced from scratch.

The staff has undergone special training tobe able to prepare the new menu that includes learningthe valuable time-saving skill of the fastest way to chop vegetables.

'If only one farmer can live better because of us, I think that's a success.' Jeanine Landry, Centre Communautaire Sainte-Anne

They are being rewarded for the more challenging work, including a slightly higher wage than before, a chance to build hours towards a chef certification, and the possibility of profit sharing.

Five per centof the profits made from the kitchen, caf and catering service will be divided among the workers.

Thriault works side by side with Jeanine Landry.Sheis responsible for balancing out food costs and keeping a steady stream oflocal produce flowing into the kitchen.

Though it's been hard to convince suppliers that they want New Brunswick produce first, she thinks it's worth it.

"Every year people are going to join us and at the end we're going to help all the farmers and everything that is local," Landry said, "And I think that's great. If only one farmer can live betterbecause of us,I thinkthat's a success."

In a letter sent home to students, parents are being encouraged to send in their children's favourite homemade recipes. If the recipes are practical and cost-effective for mass production, and if they can be sourced locally, staff may incorporate those recipes into the cafeteria's menu.

The cafeteria sold 70,000mealslast year. The hope is that this year, that will increase.

The same staff that works the kitchen will also take over the caf and catering business.