Renowned chef and children’s health champion Jamie Oliver has brought his Ministry of Food’s 10 Skills Food Education program to the U.S. for the first time on May 1, 2025. He is now making promo rounds, including news and talk shows like Good Morning America and Live With Kelly & Mark.
After seeing major success in the U.K., this free and forward-thinking initiative aims to teach middle and high school students the core cooking skills they need to make healthier choices that last a lifetime. With an ambitious target of reaching one million students worldwide by 2030, the program provides teachers and community groups with hands-on lessons, videos, recipes, and tools designed to help young people build confidence in the kitchen.
Again, it’s free, but schools need to sign up. And in case you were wondering, The “Ministry of Food” part comes from Oliver’s 2008 book, “Jamie’s Ministry of Food: Anyone Can Learn to Cook in 24 Hours” (you can find some of the recipes here).
A long, tough uphill battle dating way back
Recently, Jamie Oliver opened up about the toughest battle of his career — transforming school lunches in the U.K. From public backlash to political breakthroughs, one chef’s mission to feed kids better sparked a national movement and lasting change. Thanks to our head writer Pat Hartman, this blog also followed Oliver’s difficult yet determined journey through the years, like this 2016 post on the Oliver vs. sugar debate and the 2012 post about his crusade against childhood obesity in the U.S.
In a candid interview featured in a new episode of Netflix’s “Chef’s Table: Legends,” Oliver revisits the stormy days of his school food campaign, calling it the “most miserable” period of his life. His mission was simple: get healthier, more nutritious meals into British schools. But what seemed like common sense to him — feeding kids better — quickly turned into a national controversy. Oliver’s efforts famously signaled the end of unhealthy cafeteria staples like the Turkey Twizzler, sparking fierce pushback from some parents who went as far as delivering junk food through school gates.
Oliver recalls:
I just wanted to fix it all… I was like the enemy… The bins at the end of lunch were full of my food…
Despite the discouragement, Oliver remained determined. He later realized the resistance wasn’t about the food itself but familiarity. “Those kids were probably the fourth generation that hadn’t learned to cook at home or at school,” he explained. It wasn’t just a change in menu but a cultural shift.
Oliver says:
I was told a child needs to try something 14 times before accepting it. They need love and encouragement, just like your own child.
Getting policymakers on board proved equally frustrating. Oliver recalled the challenge of getting government officials to move past budget concerns. But the tide finally turned with the release of his Channel 4 documentary “Jamie’s School Dinners.” The series captured public attention and coalesced political will. Within weeks, Oliver had a meeting with then-Prime Minister Tony Blair, who agreed to fund sweeping reforms in school food standards.
Blair himself appears in the “Chef’s Table” episode, praising Oliver’s enduring influence:
Jamie’s much more than a chef. He made cooking cool and linked food to health and nutrition long before it was mainstream.
A few words about “Chef’s Table: Legends”
If you are not familiar with “Chef’s Table,” it’s an acclaimed docuseries in its second decade that spotlights some of the world’s most visionary and captivating chefs. The latest installment, currently playing on Netflix, features legendary chefs Jamie Oliver, José Andrés, Thomas Keller, and Alice Waters. Not only are they culinary icons but they’re also compassionate advocates for a better world, feeding those in crisis, and creating healthier lifestyles for us all.
A glimpse at Oliver’s worldview
In a recent roundtable interview, Oliver spoke about how he got into cooking (“And when I say cooking saved me, I don’t think I’m exaggerating”), and the one ingredient that he absolutely could not live without:
Olive oil. We grew up using butter and lard and ghee. But olive oil is the connector. It’s the thing that allows you to transmit flavor and spice and herbs. And of course, it’s the healthiest oil on the planet, full of polyphenols.
We will leave you with one more quote, which was Oliver’s response to the question about the one thing he wished people understood about food:
I think, now more than ever, cooking is freedom. Cooking is the amazing ability to nourish yourself and your family and the people that you love with deliciousness and truth. And it’s a real superpower.
If I had one wish in the world, it would be that every 16-year-old kid would leave high school knowing 10 recipes to save their life, the basics of nutrition, where food comes from, and how it affects their body.
It is not a luxury; it’s a necessity. It’s a life skill. Every time you’re trying to fix a problem, you’re looking at the most vulnerable within the problem.
And in the U.K., we have free-school-lunch kids, and the parents of those kids have to be earning a very small amount of money to get that free school lunch. Filling that child’s tummy and that child’s mind is really exciting.
For me, that just gives you a template for true hope. And to truly be fair, to truly be a democracy, you have to have hope — that no matter where you come from, as long as you apply yourself, as long as you turn up, as long as you’re kind, the sky’s the limit.
Your responses and feedback are welcome!
Source: “Culinary Legends Gather Around the Chef’s Table For Its 10th Anniversary,” Netflix, 4/25/25
Source: “Jamie Oliver shares cooking lessons,” Good Morning America, 4/29/25
Source: “Episode Guide,” Live With Kelly & Mark, 5/1/25
Source: “Jamie Oliver admits controversial school dinners campaign was ‘most miserable’ time of his life,” Tyla.com, 4/28/25
Image: Screenshot of Jamie Oliver’s Ministry of Food’s Ten Skills Food Education Program homepage, used under Fair Use: Commentary