Imagine a kitchen where chefs struggle to break eggs and gobble the ingredients when no one's looking. It may sound like a disaster, but it's a recipe for success in teaching kids about nutritious eating. Much has been made of child obesity and junk food consumption, but less has been done to teach kids (and in some cases their parents) how to step away from the potato chips in favor of homemade, healthy meals. Luckily, more youngsters across Europe are learning by playing with their food.
Since opening its doors in 2000, north London's Kid's Cookery School, tel: (44-208) 992 882, www.thekidscookeryschool.co.uk, has brought over 10,000 children, aged 3 and up, into its brightly colored, kid-friendly kitchens. The students, many of whom are disabled or from disadvantaged backgrounds, get hands-on lessons in preparing everything from quiche to sweet and sour chicken. "We give kids the knowledge, know-how and skills they need to eat and live well," says the school's founder Fiona Hamilton-Fairley. "Children deserve that information."
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