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Fort Worth food pantry, Tarrant Area Food Bank offer free cooking workshops for families

Students gather around the stove at St. Luke鈥檚 in the Meadow Episcopal Church on Nov. 9, 2023, to learn how to make white bean basil chicken chili. Fort Worth children and their families can attend cooking classes through 4Saints Episcopal Food Pantry and Tarrant Area Food Bank.
Marissa Greene
/
Fort Worth Report
Students gather around the stove at St. Luke鈥檚 in the Meadow Episcopal Church on Nov. 9, 2023, to learn how to make white bean basil chicken chili. Fort Worth children and their families can attend cooking classes through 4Saints Episcopal Food Pantry and Tarrant Area Food Bank.

Nathan Casillas learns something new every time he visits St. Luke鈥檚 in the Meadow Episcopal Church.

Along with scriptures and hymns, the 11-year-old has learned that beans can be a source of protein. He鈥檚 learned how to cook vegetables on a stove. He also learned that he doesn鈥檛 like mushrooms 鈥 but said he鈥檒l put them on his pizza anyway as a way to make the dish more nutritious.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 like mushrooms. I don鈥檛 know why. But they鈥檙e good for you. They鈥檙e healthy,鈥 Nathan said. 鈥淪o maybe it would be a good thing if I tried mushrooms.鈥

Nathan and other Fort Worth children are part of a six-week cooking workshop called an initiative to help kids learn about healthy eating through Tarrant Area Food Bank and the nonprofit Cooking Matters.

Nathan Casillas, 11, stirs a pot of chili at St. Luke鈥檚 in the Meadow Episcopal Church鈥檚 kitchen on Nov. 9, 2023. Casillas is a participant of the Cooking Matters for Families cooking classes.
Marissa Greene
/
Fort Worth Report
Nathan Casillas, 11, stirs a pot of chili at St. Luke鈥檚 in the Meadow Episcopal Church鈥檚 kitchen on Nov. 9, 2023. Casillas is a participant of the cooking classes.

Lessons cover meal preparation, grocery shopping, food budgeting and nutrition. Participants learn cooking skills, including knife techniques that make chopping vegetables easier or less wasteful, and how to read ingredient labels, according to .

4Saints Episcopal Food Pantry partners with Tarrant Area Food Bank to host classes at St. Luke鈥檚 in the Meadow Episcopal Church. Food used in the workshops is provided by the food bank. At the end of each class, participants receive a bag of ingredients to replicate the dishes they learn to make from the workshops back at home.

The food pantry is a ministry of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas and is made up of five churches in Tarrant County that distribute food to people in need.

The church is located in the 76103 ZIP code, which is a low-income area recognized as having low access to fresh, healthy food by the U.S. Department of Agriculture鈥檚 . Participants in the cooking classes can reside in other parts of Tarrant County, said Patti Callahan, head of 4Saints Episcopal Food Pantry.

Callahan also coordinates the cooking workshops held at the pantry. Hosting the cooking classes has been another way the nonprofit can serve people who come to the food pantry, she said.

鈥淭he kids have been really good, they were all very attentive,鈥 Callahan said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 along the lines of what Jesus told us to do.鈥

Patti Callahan, left, talks to Cooking Matters for Families participants about safe ways to prep chicken during a Nov. 9, 2023, workshop.
Marissa Greene
/
Fort Worth Report
Patti Callahan, left, talks to Cooking Matters for Families participants about safe ways to prep chicken during a Nov. 9, 2023, workshop.

Tatiana Casillas, Nathan Casillas鈥 mother, signed him up for the cooking classes because she saw his interest in helping her out in the kitchen at home.

The cooking classes are a way for him to learn how to cook healthy meals for himself and his four younger siblings but also to fuel his passion to become a chef when he grows up, she said.

鈥淭his is the first thing that we鈥檙e doing besides school and going out as a family,鈥 Casillas said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a skill that he鈥檒l need in life and I really do enjoy my kids in the kitchen because he鈥檚 not going to starve, and he鈥檚 not going to wait for somebody to cook for him. So definitely a skill in life that he enjoys now.鈥

Marissa Greene is a Report for America corps member, covering faith for the Fort Worth Report. You may contact her at marissa.greene@fortworthreport.org or on Twitter 

At the Fort Worth Report, news decisions are made independently of our board members and financial supporters. Read more about our editorial independence policy .

This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Marissa Greene is a Report for America corps member and covers faith in Tarrant County for the Fort Worth Report.