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Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Opens Search for 2026 Florida Future Chef Champion

The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) is now accepting entries for Florida Future Chef 2026, a statewide student cooking competition that challenges young Floridians to creatively reimagine school meals using Florida-grown ingredients, while learning about the nutrition standards that guide the National School Lunch Program.

“Parents are paying closer attention to what’s in their children’s food, and they should,” said Florida Commissioner of Agriculture Wilton Simpson. “The Florida Future Chef competition encourages students to think differently about nutrition by using fresh Florida-grown ingredients instead of relying on heavily processed foods. That’s good for our kids, good for our farmers, and good for Florida.”

Now in its sixth year, Florida Future Chef invites Florida students ages 8-12 (at the time of the September 2026 finale event) to submit a two-to-five-minute video showcasing their unique take on a favorite school meal. Recipes must be inspired by federal school meal nutrition standards – which promote a variety of whole grains, fruits, vegetables, and protein foods — and feature Fresh From Florida ingredients.

The contest is open now through July 13 at 11:59 p.m. ET. Students will compete for prizes and up to $5,000 in college funds provided by the presenting Sponsor, Sprouts Healthy Communities Foundation.

From hundreds of submissions statewide, FDACS’ Division of Food, Nutrition, and Wellness will select three finalists to advance to a three-day finale held in Tampa. During the event, these talented student chefs will strengthen their kitchen skills, learn how nutrition standards shape school meals, and put their creativity to the test by presenting a final dish to a panel of judges.

Source : fdacs.gov

Trending Video

Turning Better Feed Into Better Herds: Innovation in Forage Harvesting

Video: Turning Better Feed Into Better Herds: Innovation in Forage Harvesting


What happens when a dairy farmer gets frustrated with equipment that isn’t doing its job? In this episode, we sit down with Horning Manufacturing founder Leon Horning to hear how a problem in the feed bunk led to a globally recognized forage equipment company.

Born out of a third-generation dairy operation in Pennsylvania, Horning Manufacturing started with one goal: helping cows get more nutrition from silage. Leon shares how his father, Leon Sr., built the first kernel processor rolls in the family farm shop after seeing whole corn kernels pass through cows undigested — costing valuable feed efficiency and milk production.

We explore the company’s journey from a side project on the farm to an international manufacturer serving dairy farmers, beef operators, and custom harvesters around the world. Along the way, Leon discusses the evolution of pull-type forage harvesters, the engineering behind Horning’s “plug-and-play” kernel processor kits, and why reducing downtime during harvest can make or break a season.

The conversation also dives into Horning’s row-independent corn heads, practical equipment design, real-world customer stories, and how innovations born in the field continue to shape the company today.

Whether you’re a producer, equipment enthusiast, or simply love stories of grassroots innovation, this episode offers a fascinating look at how one farm family turned necessity into industry-changing technology.

Contact Horning Manufacturing today at 717-354-5040
https://www.horningmfg.com/