Fresh Tastes @ School

Fresh Tastes @ School NSW Healthy School Canteen Strategies
The Fresh Tastes @ School NSW Healthy School Canteen Strategy came into effect in 2005. It is mandatory for all NSW Government schools (from Term 1, 2005) and strongly supported and endorsed by the Catholic and Independent Education Sectors. The strategy is all about giving students across NSW a taste for healthy foods. It heralds a move beyond nutrition guidelines for school canteens to a government-endorsed approach that helps schools determine the healthier types and frequency of foods that are available for sale in their canteens.
Information on the Fresh Tastes Strategy including resources can be found at http://www.health.nsw.gov.au/obesity/adult/canteens.html
Fresh Tastes Resources Include:
· Canteen Menu Planning Guide
· Sugar Sweetened Drink Ban for NSW Schools flyer
· Fresh Tastes Tool Kit
· Fresh Ideas Folder
· Fresh Tastes Newsletters
· Parent Information Flyer
These can be downloaded here
Canteen Menu Planner Picture
‘Occasional’ Food Criteria Table
Sugar Sweetened Drink Ban in NSW Schools
These resources can also be purchased through Healthy Kids by downloading a Resource Order Form.
Why Focus on School Canteens?
Schools are ideal settings to educate about healthy food choices and physical activity. School canteens can provide a substantial proportion of a child’s daily nutritional intake if both lunch and snacks are regularly purchased from the school canteen. The school canteen provides the means by which children and adolescents can put into practice the nutrition messages they are being taught in the classroom. The canteen can model healthier food choices that are tasty, interesting and affordable. This can influence food choices at school and in the wider community.
Thank you to NSW Health for allowing this material to be posted on the Associations' website.
Find out about other Australian State Canteen Strategies
Latest News
To heat or not to heat, that is the question. There wouldn’t be a wintery day that goes by without a child coming up to the canteen to ask if we could heat up their lunch for them. The issues with that are endless, and that’s just from a food safety point of view.