A Tararua woman who learned as a teen to preserve seasonal produce while living in a foster home now teaches high school students in Dannevirke to do the same.
As a teenager, Ranier Arnold lived in a foster home on a dry-stock farm, where
Ranier Arnold teaches rural studies and food tech at Totara College.
A Tararua woman who learned as a teen to preserve seasonal produce while living in a foster home now teaches high school students in Dannevirke to do the same.
As a teenager, Ranier Arnold lived in a foster home on a dry-stock farm, where she hand-milked cows, made butter, processed meat and did everything on horseback.
The rural lifestyle gave her skills that later became useful when she faced life as a single mother.
“If I didn’t have those skills, I would have struggled.”
The 52-year-old now passes on her knowledge through her rural studies and food tech classes at Totara College in Dannevirke, teaching the importance of food production and preservation.
She said it was the crossover between the “all-encompassing” classes that made her excited.
Arnold’s “seed-to-table philosophy” includes involving students in creating gardens, planting seeds, and making the most of the produce in the kitchen - all at school.
“It doesn’t have to be onerous or tedious.”
In a recent class, students had learnt different ways to utilise feijoas, which included making jam, muffins and even dehydrating.
Arnold wanted students to look beyond the confines of the supermarket.
“It’s not just about putting fruit in a jar.
“It’s not just researching about these things, it’s going and visiting these places for these kids to have some hands-on experience.”
She said the skills taught to the students could open up opportunities and “spark ideas” for when they left school.
“There are ways and means around things if you apply a bit of thought.”
Arnold is now planning for a butcher to come to class, to teach students about making sausages.
By Rainer Arnold
Ingredients
⦁ 560g feijoas chopped and skinned
⦁ ¼ cup water
⦁ 1 ¾ cups granulated sugar
⦁ 2 Tbsp lemon juice
Instructions:
Sterilising the jars:
For the Feijoa Jam:
The recipe makes two 300ml jars.
Michaela Gower joined Hawke’s Bay Today in 2023 and is based out of the Hastings and Central Hawke’s Bay newsrooms. She covers Dannevirke and Hawke’s Bay news and has a love for sharing stories about farming and rural communities.