Miami Herald

Student chefs cook for low-income students

- BY LORRAINE LONGHI

On an early morning in December, Mark Sandoval and his students at UNLV’s Harrah College of Hospitalit­y are up before the sun, preparing enough food to feed more than 600 small bodies.

Sandoval, executive chef at the hospitalit­y college, and his students are just a handful of the chefs who cooked about 8,000 meals last year for lowincome elementary school students who might not regularly have access to a nutritious, home-cooked meal in the mornings. “There is really a lack of students learning at a young age what a balanced diet looks like and what a balanced diet can do for them on a daily basis and in their personal lives,” Sandoval said. “Not eating a healthy breakfast and getting your day started, especially at a young age, is detrimenta­l. It really fuels their brains to be receptive to learning.”

Chefs for Kids, which originated more than 30 years ago from a partnershi­p between the University of Nevada, Reno Extension and the Las Vegas chapter of the American Culinary Federation Chefs, brings meals to students at Title I

schools, a federal designatio­n for schools with a large percentage of low-income students with

fewer educationa­l resources.

For Sandoval, the program is a teaching moment for his students at UNLV, too.

Having students at the hospitalit­y college participat­e in the program gives them hands-on experience and teaches the importance of being a member of their local community, beyond just patronizin­g local restaurant­s and networking with local chefs.

“For them, when we go and we serve 650 people, it happens pretty quickly,” Sandoval said. “It also teaches them to move quickly, to move with purpose and a sense of urgency.”

Mai Hoang, a senior at the hospitalit­y college, was in her second year volunteeri­ng with Chefs for Kids and said she loved seeing the happiness the program brings to children’s faces.

“Every interactio­n is just so innocent and so genuine,” she said.

 ?? K.M. CANNON Las Vegas Review-Journal/TNS ?? UNLV students, including Minh Nguyen, prepare breakfast at Harrah College of Hospitalit­y for about 650 elementary students on Dec. 8. The event was part of a Chefs for Kids program in which volunteers cook meals for Title I schools.
K.M. CANNON Las Vegas Review-Journal/TNS UNLV students, including Minh Nguyen, prepare breakfast at Harrah College of Hospitalit­y for about 650 elementary students on Dec. 8. The event was part of a Chefs for Kids program in which volunteers cook meals for Title I schools.

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