Take a Bite of BC

Take a Bite of BC

Take a Bite of BC

Connecting Students to Agriculture

BC students deserve to cook and eat only the best — and that’s BC grown products! Since 2009, BC Agriculture in the Classroom Foundation (BCAITC), together with the BC Culinary Arts Association, BC agricultural commodity groups, and BC producers, has been delivering fresh, BC grown product five times a year to secondary schools running a Culinary Arts program. Take a Bite of BC has grown from 14 schools in our first year to 60 schools, impacting over 7,200 Culinary Arts students directly and influencing an additional 65,000 students to eat local, BC grown, and prepared dishes on a regular basis in their school cafeterias.

Why We Love Take a Bite of BC

  • It builds awareness for teachers and their students of the abundance of local, fresh, and delicious products grown throughout BC. Students in teaching kitchens gain an appreciation of the value of local farms and farmland to their communities, the economy, and the environment.
  • It promotes healthy food choices in the kitchen to Culinary Arts students, who are our future chefs and farm-to-table ambassadors.
  • It provides instructors and their students with fresh, healthy food. 

Watch Take a Bite of BC in action in BC secondary schools

Meet Chef Randle, one of the founding chef instructors of Take a Bite of BC and Culinary Arts instructor at Maple Ridge Secondary School. 

Sign Us Up!

Take a Bite of BC is available to public, First Nations, and independent secondary schools offering a Culinary Arts program, as stipulated by the provincial grade 11 and 12 curriculum: "Cafeteria Training," "Cooks Training," and/or "Youth TRAIN in Trades (Formerly ACE-IT) Program".

To find out more, see our Take a Bite of BC School Application

What Do We Need to Get Started?

  • Teaching kitchen classes are full-time grade 11 and 12 “Cafeteria Training” and “Cooks Training” students, as listed on the BC Government curriculum site. “Youth TRAIN in Trade (Formerly ACE-IT)” students are also included, if applicable.
  • The kitchen/classroom is staffed with a Red Seal or similarly accredited chef who is a BC Culinary Arts Specialist Association (BCCASA) member in good standing. This may be the teacher or chef assistant.
  • To best communicate the program's featured BC products, participating schools are asked to hang our Take a Bite of BC signage and producer and product information sheets in a prominent location in the cafeteria in view of the entire school population.
  • The majority of the dishes produced from the Take a Bite of BC shipments are meant to be enjoyed by the entire school. What students make using the donated products, as well as how you pass the savings on to the customers of the cafeteria, is left to the discretion of the chef instructor. (While the program’s objective is not to supplement school budgets, this is a possible positive outcome.)
  • Complete and submit online feedback log forms after every delivery. Please include pictures, quotes, and stories of how the items have been utilized. These images will be used in newspapers, donor communications, bulletin boards, presentations, the BCAITC website, and/or other types of educational publications. We ask that you send in at least three feedback forms (schools that do not comply may be removed from the program).

If you are interested in and eligible to enroll in Take a Bite of BC, please complete the School Application, then email it to Paul Boudreau.

A Crop of Resources!

Below are learning resources to bring agriculture and food education into your classroom. These resources are available for you to download, or order online, to help further the food/farm connection with your Take a Bite of BC Culinary Arts students (as well as Home Economics students). 

Spotlight Series

Spotlight Series

The Spotlight Series is a compilation of multi-faceted toolkits for various BC foods featuring videos, lessons, activities, recipes, GIS activities, and more. 

Stay tuned to this page as new Spotlight Series toolkits will be introduced this year. 

Recipes

Teaching chefs, along with Chef Trevor Randle and BC Culinary Arts students, have developed a number of kitchen-tested recipes and techniques using all of the products in the program. Find these delicious BC grown recipes on our Recipes page.

Additional Resources

Fields for Your Future 

The Real Dirt on Farming - Print Version or Digital Version

Grow BC: A Guide to BC's Agricultural Resources

Watch a Culinary Arts student at Burnaby Central Secondary School demonstrate how to fillet a fresh BC salmon

Make A Payment

 
School Name
 

 

60
Teaching Kitchens
7,271
Culinary Arts Students
46,140 lbs
Fresh BC Products
36
Product Donors
grape
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Contact us at: info@aitc.ca or call 1(866) 517-6225

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