Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - HT Navi Mumbai Live

Sanjeev Kapoor to make prison meals tastier

- Anubhuti Matta anubhuti.matta@hindustant­imes.com

Cold, bland, indifferen­tly prepared meals day after day – prison food is a punishment in itself.

That’s why the idea of a collaborat­ion between the Arthur Road jail and celebrity chef Sanjeev Kapoor to improve the quality and production of meals for inmates comes as appetising news.

“We approached chef Kapoor because we felt the need to improve our cooking style and levels of hygiene,” says Rajvardhan Sinha, Inspector General of Police – Prisons. “We needed expert guidance in understand­ing A massive explosion gutted Mexico’s biggest fireworks market in Mexico City late on Tuesday. The explosion killed at least 31 people and injured 72, authoritie­s said. Chef Sanjeev Kapoor with IGP (Prisons) Rajvardhan Sinha and IPS and jail superinten­dent Harshad Ahirrao.

how hygiene and food produced in large quantities can go hand-in-hand.”

Kapoor and his team of

10 have been roped in to recommend ways in which the prison kitchens can turn out better food, while staying within the government’s budgets and convention­s for feeding inmates.

“Our priority is to improve current processes to serve better tasting and hot food,” says the chef.

“In time, we will also look at mechanisin­g some processes and train inmates to help.”

Some solutions seem simple enough: solar energy for cooking, movable chafing dishes to keep food warm, and borrowing commercial kitchen practices to use resources better when organising meals for a large group. To help, Pune’s Symbiosis School of Culinary Arts has also been approached.

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