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    Dean and Laura Murray and Patti Williams stir the pasta in marinara sauce in the commercial cooker PHOTO BY GARY ZUPANCIC/WIMBERLEY VIEW
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    Chef Jay Bachman with rising rolls. PHOTO BY GARY ZUPANCIC/WIMBERLEY VIEW
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    Scott Tidwell checks to see if they are on schedule. PHOTO BY GARY ZUPANCIC/WIMBERLEY VIEW
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    Lauralee Harris takes a deep breath before diving into the broccoli PHOTO BY GARY ZUPANCIC/WIMBERLEY VIEW

Wimberley Community pitches in to feed students

WISD makes sure low-income students have daily food during school, and they do a great job. But a new wrinkle happened this year affecting how the school kids would eat this summer. WISD received a grant to continue feeding kids and their families in need even when school was not held in person, but that grant ran out on June 30.

There was a need and the community came together to make sure hungry stomachs would be filled this summer. Under the leadership of Assistant Pastor Scott Tidwell of Wimberley’s First Baptist Church, the move was made to find a solution.

“It was the first part of May and I thought ‘Hey there’s going to be a problem,’” Tidwell said. “...First I called Chef Jay (Bachman). ‘How many people can I feed per day?’ Two thousand a day, in a week that’s ten thousand. I knew the kitchen equipment would work and Ben E. Keith (the food distributor) was being very helpful,” Tidwell said. The plan would work. Especially with Mercy Chef’s know how.

Scott was a master chef himself, with cooking skills learned while running and owning a few businesses. “I built and ran a steak house for three years. I’m self taught,” he said.

The transition would happen smoothly with FBC and Mercy Chefs and their disaster experience. Soon others joined on for the project to feed hungry kids in the valley. The Barnabas Connection, the Ministerial Alliance, the town’s churches joined up, as did Traci Maxwell of the WISD School Board, the Fig Tree, and the Crisis Bread Basket. Local volunteers picked up the slack to deliver the warm meals to different areas of the valley.

“It is the most ready kitchen to handle meals. It made sense to work out of that,” Bachman said. “Mercy Chef’s brought in the equipment and plugged into the Baptist kitchen.” With the additional serving equipment by Mercy Chefs the kitchen’s daily output was increased tenfold.

July 1 was the first day, and the food was prepared for individual meals. The cooks had help with the food using commercial tools and the new equipment donated by Mercy Chefs.

“For sure, it’s a community event,” Tidwell said. Soon all the pasta and marinara was mixed and stirred with love. Broccoli came next, with warm rolls in the oven. The cooked food smells coming from the FBC’s kitchen were heavenly.

It was time to assemble the meals for transport to their destinations. The Fig Tree had already delivered the weekend meals packed in brown paper bags, enough to feed someone through the weekend.

A prayer and a pep talk was given by Chef Jay, and then it was time for volunteers to assemble food into Styrofoam individual servings. Volunteer drivers were on their way after just a few minutes. Then tools and equipment were cleaned and ready to use for the next day.

A problem was discovered, but with the help and cooperation of the Wimberley Independent School District, local churches, non-profits, and other volunteers made sure the solution would in gear until school starts in August.

Wimberley View

P.O. Box 49
Wimberley, TX 78676
Phone: 512-847-2202
Fax: 512-847-9054