Chefs show their compassion on Youth Day

It was a day when their collective spirit for volunteering motivated them to brave the icy weather to prepare a meal from surplus rescued produce for children in need.

Youth Day 2020 had a special significance for a group of culinary students who were brought together by Chefs with Compassion, a surplus-driven movement to nourish those in need.

It was a day when their collective spirit for volunteering motivated them to brave the icy weather to prepare a meal from surplus rescued produce for children in need.

The 12 youths from six culinary schools (HTA School of Culinary Art, Swiss Hotel School, Capsicum Culinary Studio, the National Youth Chef Training Programme, JHB Culinary and Pastry School, and Culinary Passions School of Hospitality), arrived bright and early for a ready-steady-cook challenge.

This is what Chefs with Compassion is all about – taking produce that would otherwise have gone to waste – no matter what it might be – and turning it into delicious, nutritious meals for people who would otherwise go hungry.

Faced with a mountain of melons and an abundance of cauliflower, executive chef of the African Pride Melrose Arch Hotel Autograph Collection Adrian Vigus-Brown, who is one of the management team driving Chefs with Compassion, decided on a melon curry.

He said: “Today, we’ve got youth cooking for the youth on Youth Day. Through Nosh Food Rescue NPC, Chefs with Compassion rescues produce and the chefs in our network of over 30 kitchen hubs turn it into meals. This means the chefs sometimes don’t have much of a choice of what we’re going to do, but we do have a choice of how we’re going to do it.

“Today, we’re making a hearty, fortified curry for 150 children at the New Life Centre for Girls and Children ECDC in Mayibuye, two of the homes supported by chef Citrum Khumalo and the CK Foundation.”

Chefs with Compassion has been serving meals to the needy since just after lockdown started, and today has over 32 kitchen hubs who voluntarily give of their time and resources to convert the rescued produce into nourishing meals.

The organisation is driven entirely by volunteers and, to date, Chefs with Compassion has served over 220 000 meals produced from 12.5 tonnes of rescued produce across the greater Johannesburg area and Pretoria, and is expanding its footprint into Durban, Cape Town, Rustenburg and Potchefstroom.

For more information and to assist with donations, surplus end-of-life products and logistical requirements, visit www.chefswithcompassion.org.za or follow them on Facebook/chefswithcompassion

Calson Madlala and Austine Nxumalo (National Youth Chef Training Programme).
Selometsi Mokoena (Swis Hotel School).
Sheila Dube and Minenhle Mncube (Culinary Passion School of Hospitality).
Emile Wienand (HTA School of Culinary Art).
Front: Leroy Mguni (HTA School of Culinary Art), Selometsi Mokoene (Swiss Hotel School), Sheila Dube (Culinary Passion School of Hospitality), Keitumetse Mgwane (JHB Culinary & Pastry School), Gomolemo Maruping (JHB Culinary & Pastry School) and Minenhle Mncube (Culinary Passion School of Hospitality). Back: Lungelo Mbotshwa (Capsicum Culinary Studio), Marlin Pretorius (HTA School of Culinary Art), Uriel Grobbelaar (Swiss Hotel School), Calson Madlala (National Youth Chef Training Programme), Au
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