Student cookie-makers at Patchogue-Medford high school get new commercial-grade kitchen, thanks to federal grant

Most school days, the Patchogue-Medford Raider Bean Cafe sells out of its 200 student-baked oatmeal and chocolate chip cookies and coffee.ย 

And now theย high school student-run cafe, ledย by four teachers,ย 36 special needs students, and 10 student mentors and interns, has moved intoย a new commercial-grade kitchen at the high school. There, the teens will get hands-on experience of working in a restaurant kitchen.

The program started three years ago, as teachers wanted to broaden theย limited work-experience opportunities students had during the COVID-19 pandemic. Students started making about 40 cookies daily out of one conventional oven and the success quickly propelled the school to expand their kitchen with additional ovens before a new kitchen was needed.

โ€œDuring COVID, we were really struggling to find places for students to go and experience work-based learning skills. So, we decided to create our own in-house program,โ€ said Jessica Lukas, assistant superintendent of special education and pupil services. โ€œAs the program grew, we had what was a residential-like kitchen and realized we needed something bigger to give our kids, anย experience to prepare them for the real world and hopefully even employ them in our central kitchen one day.โ€

The new expanded kitchen at the high school, which opened Wednesday, was built using funding from a federalย Individuals with Disabilities Education grant.

The programย assists students from 9th grade until they turn 22. Labor is split between the first three periods of the day, whenย freshmen students may begin preparing recipes, then they are baked by the next period and sold between periods by older students from the classroomโ€™s window.

In the kitchen, shelves are stocked with bags of Tollhouse chocolate chips and refrigerators are full of butter, sugar and flour.

Cookies sell for about $2 each, along with coffee, tea and hot chocolate. Proceeds throughout the year have gone to support scholarships or pay for extra…

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