Hills District Independent August 2020 #62 August 2020 | Page 12

LOCAL LIFE MAKE A DIFFERENCE: Rachel Golding Dinner on the Table by Lorna Gordon Rachel Golding started her career as an academic. She researched families and documented the impacts on the family when a member had a disability. Over the course of her research she saw that the kind of support that families with disabled members needed at household level was not being met. When her contract ended at university, she began to make home cooked meals for her family, and a friend who was working and time poor asked if she would make some for her too. Before too long, helping one friend became helping many others, and from there the idea for Dinner on the Table was born. Rachel started to think there was a potential to set up a business and she rented a commercial kitchen to work in. She laughed when she told me about the early days of getting her business off the ground. “I began cooking from home, then found a commercial kitchen and rented it one day a week. I cooked and did the deliveries to the Mums at school with insulated bags hanging off the stroller! I look back on it now and laugh, I was so naïve,” she laughed. I asked what kept her going through those crazy start up times and she told me it was the help she was giving women at home. “Many of our customers are women. In Australia it’s mostly women who oversee the meal planning and prep and they need options. Getting freshly prepared food from us saves time and energy, offers a healthy alternative to takeaway, and impacts on the weekly budget.” Rachel was soon able to combine the research findings from her academic life and her newfound career - now she was able to give back to others. She quickly started providing free meals to families with disabled members at home. “My research had shown that intervention at a household level was lacking and I realised having a dinner made for you is one way to meet that need. It helps provide extra time to the family, gives excellent nutrition and takes the pressure off the family budget by not having to purchase a meal,” Rachel told me. “This can make a huge difference to those who need to provide extra support and the monetary cost of that to the family.” At present Dinner on the Table gifts these meals to families in need. A few people Rachel has helped since start up still pick up their meals, but most are given to local charities to distribute. While they are looking at ways for the community to donate money, at present the best way to support them is to buy a meal for your own family as the donated meals are provided from the profit the business makes. Having checked out the menus and food on offer I don’t think you could go wrong by ordering a meal or two for your own family. Not only will you save time and energy and get to enjoy delicious meals, you will also be supporting a local business and helping put dinner on the table for families who need support. You can find out more about Dinner On the Table at www.dinneronthetable.com.au. Rachel has managed to combine her love of food and helping families through Dinner on the Table. 12 ISSUE 62 // AUGUST 2020 www.hdinews.com.au THE HILLS INDEPENDENT