• Our partners
  • Contact us
  • School & ECE login

Home

  • News & stories
Donate

Home

  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook

What We Do

  • Our Programmes
  • Our Impact
  • Child Poverty in NZ
  • Who we support

Take action

  • Donations
  • Fundraise
  • Partner with us

School & ECE Support

  • School Support
  • ECE Support

About Us

  • Our Story
  • FAQs
  • Contact us
  • Stories
  • Our partners
School & ECE Login
Sponsor
Privacy Policy

© 2025 KidsCan. All rights reserved.

KidsCan Charitable Trust is registered under the Charities Act 2005 CC10386

Back
  • schools
  • ece

Top Kiwi chefs’ new recipes panned

Mon, 2 Mar 2020

News-Stories-Menu-Items
News-Stories-Menu-Items

The reality of what some Kiwi families in poverty are surviving on has been laid bare in a new KidsCan campaign, as more than 3,000 children in early childhood centres and schools around New Zealand wait for the charity’s support.

Making sure kids have a full belly when they go to school so they can learn properly will help break the cycle. We really, really need to get behind this so no Kiwi kid goes hungry.

Renowned chefs Peter Gordon, Nadia Lim, Michael Van de Elzen and Allyson Gofton are calling for public help to reach them. In a series of hard-hitting videos, they prepare heartbreakingly meagre meals, each based on a real story from a family living in hardship. 

 

Nadia Lim cooks “red soup”, the leftover water that cheerios have been boiled in; Peter Gordon cooks “beef ragout”, a mix of only boiled water and mince; Allyson Gofton makes tomato risotto, with just rice and tomato sauce; while Michael Van de Elzen’s “Bouillon de Poulet” is a chicken frame boiled in water.

 

Lim, who donates monthly to KidsCan, said she felt sick when she read the “recipe” for red soup. She encouraged Kiwis to imagine themselves in the shoes of those in poverty. “Especially as a mum, it’s incredibly upsetting to think of being in a situation where you wouldn’t have anything to feed your children. It’s horrendously awful,” she said.

 

“It needs to change, and it’s quite amazing that just by providing simple things it can really change a child’s life. Making sure kids have a full belly when they go to school so they can learn properly will help break the cycle. We really, really need to get behind this so no Kiwi kid goes hungry.”

 

Van de Elzen said children would get no nutrition from chicken frame soup. “It just makes it so, so, so important what KidsCan does. Without their food… what would happen to them and those little bodies that need the energy, that need the nutrition, that needs all those sparks in their brains to fire?”

Especially as a mum, it’s incredibly upsetting to think of being in a situation where you wouldn’t have anything to feed your children. It’s horrendously awful.

News-Stories-Cooking

We’re seeing no letup in need. Despite having just taken 47 new schools into our programme, we still have 3,085 children waiting for food, shoes, raincoats and health essentials like sanitary items and head lice treatment. We need kind Kiwis to help us get to them.

KidsCan is now feeding a record 34,000 children in schools and early childhood centres across New Zealand. The charity has just sent out 133,539 kilograms of food to schools (134 tonnes) - enough to fill more than 28 shipping containers.

 

787 schools receive a range of breakfast, lunch and snack food including yoghurt, bread, spreads, fruit, baked beans, muesli bars, scroggin and hot meals of soups, curries and pasta. 25 early childhood centres receive yoghurt, fresh fruit and ingredients for five fresh lunches a week, in a programme that is currently being expanded to more centres. All food provided is endorsed by the Heart Foundation.

 

KidsCan’s CEO Julie Chapman said all Kiwi kids deserved to be sitting down to proper meals, but for some, KidsCan’s food was the only real sustenance on some days.

 

“We know that many families are at breaking point as they try to stretch budgets which are being consumed by very high rents, back to school costs or an unexpected bill. For most of the week they manage to provide for their families, but it’s often the day before pay day that the food runs out, and they resort to these heartbreaking meals.

 

“We’re seeing no letup in need. Despite having just taken 47 new schools into our programme, we still have 3,085 children waiting for food, shoes, raincoats and health essentials like sanitary items and head lice treatment. We need kind Kiwis to help us get to them.”

Related articles

    • fundraising

    How to fundraise for a charity in NZ

    What do a 100-hour barbecue, an 8.5km bear-crawl round a park, and a public beard-shaving all have in common? They’re just some of the wacky and wonderful ways Kiwis have raised money for our charity KidsCan over recent years – and proof that the sky’s the limit when it comes to drumming up cash for a cause you care about.
    • fundraising
    • schools

    'We are grandparents to all New Zealand’s mokopuna’

    Growing up, most of the children in my class were just ordinary kids, in a small town. None of us were wealthy by any stretch of the imagination, but we all had enough to eat. However two girls stood out - their cheeks were hollowed and they looked unhealthy.
    • partnerships

    The Warehouse Group is helping to give thousands of Kiwi kids a better start to the school year

    The Warehouse and Warehouse Stationery are donating 100,000 classroom essentials to KidsCan for 73 schools from Kaitaia to Invercargill.