Lunchtime is the time where you could literally hear the kids roar! Everyone is talking at the same time. Perhaps that's the one time that the could do so since they were all quite quiet and behaved during lessons. R.E.S.P.E.C.T!
As I was informed, the meal is given to the kids for free every month. Teachers, however need to pay if they are opting for the school lunch. As the fee is very much depending on the meals, I can't really say how much that would be, but we did pay 36,960KRW for 3 weeks period. We only joined the canteen meal during our first month at the school, and we brought our own lunchboxes for the following two months.
The ambience at the canteen felt very much like one at boarding school. The pupils took their utensils and food tray and lined up for the food. As for the canteen ahjumas, they're all very friendly and kind to us. They even understood us when we refused to take any meat other than seafood. They even tried to speak English to us. Well, not all of them, but still...we can applaud the effort.
Since the school has their own nutritionist, the meal is not set by the canteen operator but herself. The menu for the month is pasted in each of the classes as well as displayed on the canteen monitor. I remember, at one time, the nutritionist approached me and asked why didn't I take the fish fillet. At first, Wak and I thought that it was pork cutlets, hence our actions. It turned out to be fish fillets. Realising our confusion, the nutritionist taught us how to identify the menu on the screen. Apparently number 10 refers to pork and 16 means meat. So, from that moment on, we became a pro and ate like the Sahwa's.
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