Stephanie Alexander

Stephanie Alexander

Book signing in Adelaide, South Australia, October 2009.
Occupation Cook, restaurateur, author
Nationality Australian
Genres Cooking
Notable work(s) The Cook's Companion
Children 2

www.stephaniealexander.com.au

Stephanie Alexander is an Australian cook, restaurateur and food writer.

After studying to become a librarian and traveling the world at the age of 21, Alexander's first restaurant, Jamaican House, opened in 1964. In 1976, Alexander's next venture was Stephanie's Restaurant located in the Melbourne suburb of Fitzroy before moving to the middle-class suburb of Hawthorn in 1980. Stephanie's Restaurant closed in 1997 after operating for 21 years. She went on to publish several cookbooks, including her incredibly popular alphabetical guide to ingredients and cooking, The Cook's Companion.

Stephanie is the niece of the journalist Wilfred Burchett.

Kitchen Garden Foundation

In 2001 Stephanie piloted the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Program at Collingwood College in Melbourne. The Program grew out of Stephanie's passion for the need for children to learn about food early in life through example and positive experiences and the effect of those lessons on their food choices through life. In February 2004 the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Foundation was established. The Foundation is a not-for-profit organisation dedicated to supporting schools introducing Kitchen Gardens into primary schools.

Kitchen Garden Schools commit to a dynamic and innovative model that sees kitchen and garden classes run weekly, enabling skills-based learning that extends across the entire school curriculum.As participants in the Kitchen Garden Program, eight to twelve year-old children spend time in a productive veggie garden and home-style kitchen each and every week. There they learn skills that will last them a lifetime, and discover just how much fun it is to grow and cook their own seasonal vegetables and fruits. The diversity of locations of Kitchen Garden Schools – from Coober Pedy in the outback, to Alawa in the tropics, to beachside Bondi – means that each school community has its own challenges and successes. But all are united in their passion to bring the benefits of food education to their students.[1] The Program is currently in 180 schools Australia wide. A new round of grants for Victorian schools will open in early 2011 and will be followed by a round of National grants later in the year.

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