i clicked on a random link today, and it took me to a website about school lunches, and then i clicked on a link from there, and… did you know there’s a whole genre of blogs out there devoted to documenting school lunches? fascinating!
the kid brings a packed lunch (and recess) to school each day, in her rather fetching apple print insulated lunch bag. within this are two or three smaller boxes. the biggest one always contains a sandwich: her favourite at the moment is cheese and apple, but on heavy rotation are cheese and cucumber; ham and tomato and cucumber; vegemite and cucumber. she really likes cucumber! last monday, she had bak kwa and cucumber, on infinity bakery pumpkin sourdough, but that was a special one-off. the sandwiches are almost always made on grainy wholemeal bread (is the bread helga’s? ja!), with butter, or kewpie mayo.
dessert is fruit: cubes of melon, or apple slices. sometimes grapes or berries.
recess is usually fruit too, but sometimes it might be a squeezy tube of yoghurt, or a box of raisins. did you know you can get raspberry-flavoured raisins in the supermarket? they get raisins, and then coat it in raspberry flavour. the package shows a large grape bisected at the mouth, about to eat a raspberry — amazing. occasionally, there will be a sweet biscuit in a little strawberry-print paper bag.
reading the school lunch blogs made me think about when i was at school, and wonder what we did about food safety and insulation in the tropics. and then i realised that i never did bring lunch to school. when i was in primary school in malaysia and singapore, there was a morning session and an afternoon session. the various grades were divided up, i guess to prevent overcrowding, so if you were in primary 3, you might be scheduled for morning school that year, while the whole of primary 4 would be in afternoon school.
morning school started at 7.30 — it meant waking up to darkness at 6am — and went until 12.30 or 1pm. afternoon school operated from 1 to 6pm. throughout my school career, i ate lunch at home, before school or after, depending on which session i was cursed with at the time.
i did have recess though. i still remember — not fondly — the slightly sour taste (and the slightly furry feel) of warm water or cordial that had been sitting for a few hours under my desk in a plastic water bottle.
once i came into the pocket money, i bought little tumblers of overly diluted rose syrup cordial from the drinks stall, for 10c a pop. the drinks aunty would have a raft of these scuffed plastic tumblers laid out before her on her stainless steel counter, and a pile of cold, wet coins. it was the perfect accompaniment to a soggy curry puff (bar the crimped edge — that was satisfyingly crunchy) stuffed with nothing but curried potatoes.
i’m sorry to say that i also had a predilection for the spring rolls from the fried stall. these were not your ordinary spring rolls, mind. sure, you could have had one filled with shredded vegetables, but more often than not, i ended up with the one stuffed with diced spam. or curried potatoes…
i really like curried potato!
my favourite recess snacks were the little packs of nutella with the foil tops you peeled off and the little plastic spatulas to facilitate eating, and packets of fried noodle cakes — mamee — that you ate crunchy out of the bag. sometimes i ate them together. take that, chocolate-covered potato chips!
as i progressed through high school, i started staying after class for extra curricular activities, and so had more of a chance to eat at the school canteen. it was a large open space with a roof but no walls, with several rows of long tables and benches, and a bank of independently run stalls dispensing all manner of noodles and ricey dishes (also, a drinks stall and a particularly well-stocked snacks stall — chips, puffs, biscuits, candy, nutella, pickled plums…). i usually had a plate of fried beehoon, rice vermicelli cooked extra extra stick-in-your-throat dry, with the barest of garnishings: a handful of limp beansprouts, tails still attached, and a clump of shredded omelette, all for 30c. no-one cooks beehoon as dry as that beehoon aunty at CHIJ toa payoh in the late 80s. i miss it, still.
i must say, i was slightly horrified today as i read the school lunch blogs, but my trip down memory lane is looking decidedly more like the path to ruin. it’s probably a good thing that i ate most of my lunches at home.
here are some of the more riveting school lunch blogs i found today. on the back of jamie oliver’s TED prize speech, a change is surely in the air.
– 6th graders from NY document their daily lunches
– non-judgemental roundup of school lunches form around the world
– a teacher raises awareness about school lunches, by eating them
– gaijin english teacher eats japanese school lunches
– two blogs about the state of affairs at DC school kitchens
9 Comments
1. the kid’s lunchbox is a million times funkier than my red decor lunchbox.
2. nutella + mamee noodles = girl after my own heart.
3. my father tells me stories of warm milk at break time in his m’sian primary school. i was so inspired that i used to drink a carton every day. i wish my school canteen had sold fried bee hoon.
omg! i remember the milk drive at primary school! i think i took part for a while, and dutifully drank a carton of chocolate or strawberry milk, but eventually that UHT taste got me down. and the slight sour tinge — was it only in my head?
thanks for popping in and saying hi! 🙂
omg i used to love those little packets of nutella. i swear i could make one last at least 15min by taking the tiniest of scoops with that little plastic paddle. i remember when mamee arrived and i had a brainwave that maybe all instant noodles could be eaten raw? oh, i soon realised the unfortunate truth.
our packed lunches were never very exciting. oh how i envied the kids with space food sticks in their lunchboxes. space food sticks! in caramel! and chocolate! our canteen used to sell frozen orange quarters for 15c and oh, i loved apricot logs and ovaltine discs and frozen strawberry yoghurt and …. ahhh memories….
ahem. i think i ate raw instant noodles on more than one occasion. the flavour packet makes it more palatable, no? 😉 of course, regular instant noodles didn’t come with a collectable (and very badly printed) sticker.
you have stirred up some intense longings for ovaltinies! and i’m wondering if i should get some freeze-dried ice cream for the kid…
I hated the milk at school (well, I was only in Singapore for primaries 1 and 2). Really really disliked it. Still dislike milk. BUT I loved the Yakult I’d buy from one of the stalls each day. And yes, I still love Yakult. I also remember fried potato balls.
It just wasn’t the same in Canada – pizza and hotdogs just weren’t as nice. And mainly I had a packed lunch.
Your post brings back a lot of memories of my school years in msia 😀 There’s the uncle who sells ice balls with syrup (10 cents each!) at my primary school canteen. The vitagen and sustagen vans who come once in a while. And the malay auntry who sells fish crackers aka keropok.
Aiyah. I was waiting for you to talk about the stuffed taufu. We used to get fried hard tofu with a small slit for shredded cucumber with a squirt of dark chilli sauce. Or 50c for a small pyramid of nasi lemak with no meat – just 1/4 egg, rice, sambal, cucumber, ikan bilis and peanuts. yum. Of course, this was a rare treat. Usually it was soggy sweaty white bread sandwiches with omellete or spam, bak hoo and butter, tomato sardines and cucumber. Yum. I like your kind of nostalgia.
The lunches you got overseas seem so exotic (curry puffs! Nutella! Spam!).
All I had to look forward to was ordering a salad sandwich from the tuckshop on Mondays, because mum had forgotten to buy bread over the weekend. At least I got a packet of Smith’s chicken crisps with it – the pack had a little see-through chicken on the front 🙂
thank you all for sharing these stories of all your school lunches. happy memories indeed!
su-lin: i hope it was a cold yakult! i think i preferred vitagen, because it came in all those mysterious fruity flavours. mmm… grape vitagen…
foodwink: ice balls!? you win, totally. also, we had a milo truck sometimes, on sports day.
sue: i don’t believe we were so lucky as to have stuffed tofu at school. possibly there was yong tau fu. but that stuffed tofu was a staple at home anyway. i seem to remember being quite ambivalent about it: would eat it all, but with little enjoyment.
belle: aw. sorry you missed out! poor maeve, she will be the same.