Sunday Express

Schools must teach cooking...parents can’t, laughs Prue

- David Stephenson TV EDITOR

BAKE Off judge Prue Leith is cooking up a storm by calling on the “nanny state” to teach children how to cook healthy food – because parents aren’t doing it.

Labelling herself a “bossy boots”, South African-born Leith, 81, said the Government must now step in because “children are eating worse and getting fatter”.

She told the Soil Associatio­n: “I think the state should take a hand and teach children how to cook because parents can’t.we have lost that.we have lost generation­s of people not being able to cook.

“Lots of grandparen­ts are now in their 50s and will probably not have been taught how to cook at school.

“It is an absolute tragedy as these things should be passed down from parents to children, but we have missed that.

“If you cook a lot you start to worry what’s going into your body.

“You start to take an interest in what you eat and you eat better.

“We need to grab this and make every child learn to cook – then they will help their children to cook.”

Parents, she said, are putting the wrong food into children’s lunch boxes: “The average lunchbox is more unhealthy than the average school dinner.the fact is, mums or dads do not put the right stuff in the lunchbox. So I think it is time for a nanny state.”

Leith, who judgesthe Great British Bake Off with Paul Hollywood, said she is determined to fix the problem: “I am basically very bossy. I am an interferin­g woman and always have been. As a child I was called ‘Bossy Boots’ as I wanted to organise everything. If I see things are not right I want to get in there and fix them.”

She’s not the firsttv cook to take up these issues. Jamie

Oliver led a successful campaign on school dinners.

Prue moved to London in

1960 to attend the Cordon

Bleu Cookery School.

“When I came to the UK in the 1960s the food was bad.

“The food was dire. Children did not learn very much about cooking and everyone was getting worse and worse food to eat.

“I have been campaignin­g for 50 years on this and a lot of good has happened. But I feel we have all failed as things have got worse.

“Cooking in schools has got worse, children are eating worse and they are getting fatter. I don’t think I have succeeded in any way. You have got to keep on trying.”

 ?? ?? ‘BOSSY BOOTS’: Prue Leith fears food standards
are getting worse again
‘BOSSY BOOTS’: Prue Leith fears food standards are getting worse again

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