Menus
Welcome to Ignition Cafe
Healthy Snacks List
Information About Our Meals
We provide a 3 week menu cycle which is constantly reviewed. The menus handed to the children will be colour coded to make it easier to understand. Up-to-date plain copies of the menus can also be accessed by clicking on the link at the top of this page.
We will also be advertising Theme Days from time to time, so watch out for more information in our Newsletter.
Important Information
- All school meals are to ordered on the day and children will be responsible for ordering their lunch with their teacher in the classroom. This will ensure the children take ownership of their food choices.
- The menus will be clearly displayed in the classrooms, as well as being on the website, on the notice board outside of school and we will send an email each week with the menu attached if you would like to discuss the food options with them.
- Dinners must still be paid for in advance on Parentmail.
- Meal price is £2.30.
- It is really important that the school is kept informed of any food allergies your child may have. Please check with the office that they hold the correct information.
Healthy Eating Information
This document sits in conjunction with Healthy Schools, Child Protection, PSHE policy, Inclusion Policy and Nutrition Policy.
Nutrition is a significant factor in the growth, development and overall functioning of a child. Good nutrition provides the energy and nutrients essential to sustain life and promotes physical, emotional and cognitive development. The development of healthy eating practices and physical activity can prevent disease and support a lifetime of good health. Good nutrition is critical to optimizing each child’s potential for success. Meeting nutritional requirements throughout childhood is essential to full intellectual development. Research documents tell us that under nutrition impacts on children’s behaviour, performance and overall quality of development. Children require sufficient energy and essential nutrients each day to concentrate on accomplished learning tasks. Even mild and under nutrition and short term hunger are barriers to learning. Meals and snacks served should meet children’s nutrition needs, provide models of healthy eating patterns, and help children establish good eating patterns at an early age.
Aim To work in partnership with families and other professionals to support children in developing healthy eating practices which will become embedded for life.
Objectives
- To provide children with positive healthy eating experiences in order to promote their well- being.
- To respect the different dietary, cultural, religious and health needs of all our children
- To encourage children to develop positive attitudes towards food through the curriculum and all the other learning opportunities that are provided in the school.
- To promote an understanding of a balanced diet in which some foods play a greater role than others.
- To develop children’s understanding of the importance of the social context in which eating takes place.
- To raise awareness with children, parents and carers in developing a positive approach to food, nutrition and oral education.
- To encourage responsibility and accountability of all parents and carers in offering healthy choices to children.
The Importance of Nutrition for Children
A nutritionally balanced diet is important in childhood to ensure optimum development at a time of rapid growth. A balanced diet in childhood is not only important for growth but for learning and promoting positive habits towards healthy eating. An inadequate or unbalanced nutritional intake may not only affect growth and development in childhood but may also impact on health problems, such as heart disease and obesity in later in life. It is the types and varieties of food eaten at this time that ensure nutrient requirements are met and that the diet is nutritionally balanced. Children’s diet must include an appropriate intake of foods from the four main food groups:
- Bread, other cereals and potatoes
- Fruit and vegetables
- Milk and dairy foods
- Meat, fish and alternatives
The eat well plate highlights the different types of food that make up our diet, and shows the proportions we should eat them in to have a healthy, balanced diet.
Being Healthy
Eat breakfast every day
Eat fruit and vegetables daily
Choose snacks that will provide nutrients to compliment meals
Avoid snacks and drinks with a high sugar content between meals
Drink plenty of fluids to avoid becoming dehydrated
Be physically active every day
Brush teeth twice a day and visit your dentist regularly
Food and drink
All snacks and meals provided at the school are nutritious, avoiding large quantities of sugar, salt, saturated fats, additives, preservatives and colourings. Menus are planned in advanced and food offered is fresh, wholesome and balanced. We offer a balance and variety of snacks to provide a range of nutritious experiences for the children.
The children also have Nutrition lessons where they are taught:
- to understand and apply the principles of a healthy and varied diet
- to prepare and cook a variety of predominantly savoury dishes using a range of cooking techniques
- to understand seasonality and know where and how a variety of ingredients are grown, reared caught and processed.
Availability of water
- We have fresh drinking water readily available and water bottles are provided for children
- We support the children in recognising that they need to drink water when they are thirsty, hot or tired, or feeling unwell.
Special dietary needs and food allergies
We are sensitive to the catering needs of children with specific dietary needs, including religious considerations. Parents are asked about any special dietary requirements their child has before they start school. Parents of children who have special diets (for example a gluten-free diet) or who have food intolerances are responsible for providing the school with information about their diet and choices available to the child. We update our records regularly. Menus will be carefully planned and adapted accordingly.
Food hygiene
The kitchen facilities at the school are inspected on an annual basis in relation to the Food Safety Act. The school adheres to the recommended guidelines and good practices for the preparation and storage of food. Staff directly involved in cooking and the preparation of food, including Nutrition teachers, in the school, have successfully completed a Food Hygiene Course.
Social skills
Meals can be times of pleasant social sharing. Opportunities for pupils, teachers and parents to eat and drink together are organised, providing an opportunity for children to learn good social skills and behaviour associated with eating and drinking. This also enables staff to monitor healthy eating. Staff keep a discreet eye on those who appear not to be eating well and positive encouragement and peer support is used to encourage poor eaters to make healthy choices. Healthy eating suggestions from parents that will help us expand and improve our selection of recipe ideas are very welcome.
Special theme days
At Powers Hall Academy special theme days are organised that provide a valuable opportunity for children to experience diversity from a wide range of cultures and nationalities and the contribution they make to the variety of foods eaten in Britain today.
Special celebrations or fundraising events
Throughout the school year Powers Hall Academy holds a variety of fundraising and special celebrations during which ‘treat foods’ available for children. As a school we feel this balances the rigour of the healthy eating policy in place at all other times.