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The Food Programme

An Education: Life lessons through food

The Food Programme

BBC

Arts, Food

4.4943 Ratings

🗓️ 26 May 2019

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Genevieve Taylor sets out to meet a few of this year's BBC Food and Farming Awards finalists, and hear how learning about food has changed their lives for the better.

The first stop is Liberty Kitchen - a finalist in the Best Street Food or Takeaway category. This social enterprise operates at Pentonville Prison, where inmates produce a diverse range of 'street balls', including classic Italian meatballs, macaroni cheese balls and veggies balls; these are then sold at London street food markets. Genevieve visits the bustling prison kitchen with founder Janet Boston, before checking out the Liberty Kitchen stall at Leather Lane market in Clerkenwell - and hears overwhelming praise from current and ex-inmates involved in the scheme, who say it's giving them hope of employment post-prison.

Next up, Genevieve checks in with Food and Farming Awards judges for the Cook of the Year category: Jeanette Orrey, co-founder of the educational initiative Food For Life, and Paula McIntyre, a cook, food writer and lecturer. They've been to the Moray region of Scotland, to visit finalist Logie Primary: a rural school with just 28 pupils. Although it's small, this primary school’s making a mark with a food-focused social enterprise that’s teaching pupils food and kitchen skills, and at the same time bringing together the local community. The school's older pupils launched the Cup of Joy Community Cafe two years ago, using vegetables grown in their school allotment and eggs from the school chickens; today, it's not only teaching them valuable nutrition and life skills but providing a hub for this rural community.

Our final stop is London, where the judges for this years’ Pat Llewellyn New Talent Award - Ben Adler, whose late wife Pat inspired the award; and Barney Desmazery, food editor at large for BBC Good Food magazine - have been to Ealing to join the team behind Fat Macy’s supper club: a dining experience with a difference… The kitchen and front-of-house team are all homeless people currently living in hostels. The founder Meg Doherty launched the project three years ago, as a way to give people in temporary accommodation an opportunity to learn new skills, while earning enough money to get them back into the housing system.

Presented by Genevieve Taylor; produced by Lucy Taylor.

Transcript

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0:37.0

It's bright and very early in the morning and I'm standing at the entrance to

0:46.0

Pentonville prison in North London because although it might sound like an

0:50.4

unusual place to come for a food program. This is where everything started for one of our street food finalists at this year's Food and Farming Awards.

0:59.0

And it's a great example of how learning about food and gaining skills in the kitchen can open

1:05.9

up doors for people from all walks of life.

1:11.5

My name is Janet Boston. I'm the founder director of Liberty Kitchen, which is a social enterprise based in

1:17.2

Penderville Prison in the Staff Canteen. It's based around making street food in the prison with the men and then going out with

1:25.6

some of the men who have been in the project working with us on the stalls outside.

1:30.4

The idea came to me because I worked as an independent monitor in Holloway prison for 15 years and I'd always love street food. I worked a lot around the world and I noticed how street food could change lives.

1:43.8

So I came up with the idea and then Holloway was closed.

1:47.4

So I came to Pentonville.

1:49.6

The idea basically is to have about six to eight men at a time working on the

1:55.6

project with me with inputs from professional chefs and also a business

...

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