Students at Evergreen High School have had enough--enough pizza and burgers, that is.
They’re advocating for more nutritious selections in their school cafeterias and for recipes that better reflect their cultures. A group of youth leaders with local nonprofit Food Empowerment Education and Sustainability Team (FEEST) are acting as advisors with Highline Public Schools to create change on the menu.
Khatam Chau, a senior at Evergreen High School, is in his second year as an organizer with the group. He spent the past year helping to revamp the salad bar.
“This year, we took it a step further,” he said. “We had a big goal, changing up school food to be healthier and more culturally relevant. The food wasn’t actually representing us.”
Each month, youth leaders with the Food Empowerment Education and Sustainability Team create dishes for students to sample at lunch, with the goal of finding a recipe worthy of being featured on the regular menu.
Each dish is required to meet the district’s nutrition standards related to fat, sodium and sugar content, as well as essential food groups and nutrients.
Students at Evergreen developed a recipe for butternut squash curry that was so popular that administrators agreed to try it out at the district level.
“Our greatest success is getting our butternut squash curry into all the schools,” Chau said. “People really liked it.”
On March 29, for the first time ever, a student-developed recipe was on the menu at every elementary, middle and high school in Highline.
Having students lead the charge in making change when it comes to food injustice is what Chau likes about the Food Empowerment Education and Sustainability Team.
“FEEST is a collaborative effort, and the youth are at the forefront,” he said.
He explained that when his family first immigrated to the area, he immediately noticed the difference in food being served in the cafeteria and in the fast food restaurants near the school, compared to what he ate at home.
“It made me feel disconnected,” he said.
Then he started volunteering with the Food Empowerment Education and Sustainability Team. The group hosts weekly, community dinners at Evergreen and Chief Sealth High Schools.