BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) - Rob Cox doesn’t hear too many complaints about his cooking.
People ask him where the hot sauce is from time to time, but that doesn’t hurt his feelings. He understands it’s more force of habit and not for lack of flavor.
Cox, the hunger relief coordinator at the Shalom Community Center for the past six months, knows his hard work is appreciated.
“It’s like a necessary evil, what we do here. Obviously, I’d prefer for homelessness to not be an issue, but that’s just not the case,” Cox said this week while supervising Shalom’s daily free lunch. “Both mentally and spiritually, I am blessed to have this job.”
Cox has a culinary degree and has managed other kitchens, often spending hours behind a desk each day placing orders for future meals. At Shalom, desk work is minimal.
The man with an imposing stature and friendly smile preps each day’s meal from 8 to 11:30 a.m. with whatever ingredients are on hand. Cox, 48, said much of the food served at Shalom comes from Hoosier Hills Food Bank, while more donations come in from churches, sororities and fraternities.
“I open the back door and never know what will be waiting for me,” Cox said of the facility at 620 S. Walnut St. “People show up with bags of stuff, and then they thank me for taking it. I laugh and say ’Thank you,’ but I’m the one who should be thanking them. Everybody wins.”
The variety that comes with a primarily donated storeroom provides Cox a logistical challenge.
“Every day I come to work, it’s like an episode of ’Chopped’,” Cox said, referencing the Food Network show where contestants are handed baskets of mystery ingredients and tasked to make something delicious. “I look at what we have and think about what I can make out of it. I love it.
“I get to cook every day, and that’s what makes me happy.”
Shalom prides itself in being an all-inclusive resource center for area homeless people, providing case work, street outreach and simply a place to hang out during the day. Sometimes overlooked, though, is the effect a warm meal can have on a person.
In the past year, Shalom served more than 74,000 meals through its kitchen.
“It’s life-saving,” Shalom executive director Forrest Gilmore said. “Nothing can be done without the basics in life. None of us can thrive without food in our belly or a roof over our head when we go to sleep at night. Having access to a daily meal means more than you’d think.”
Gilmore said Cox has been fitting into the culture of the Shalom Center very well in his six months on the job. Cox’s love for the job is apparent to Gilmore and to Shalom’s clientele, who just want to eat a warm meal with friends.
“Being here makes them feel like home or reminds them of a time when things might have been better,” Gilmore said.
Cox takes that charge seriously. Shalom usually has around 100 clients in any given day milling about during lunchtime. Cox said he tries to make enough food to fill 200 plates, so people can get a second helping if they want. On spaghetti day, which is a staple at Shalom, or on days when Cox fixes up roast chicken or pork chops or, especially, his bread pudding, seconds are a given.
“I know my clients, at least, the regulars,” Cox said. “After a few months on the job, I’ve figured out what the hits are.”
Meals are often ladled out by volunteers such as Levi Bolton, who was homeless for a couple of years before finding a stable apartment; now, he says he wants to give back to a place that gave him so much.
“When you’re homeless, people look down on you wherever you go. When you come here, people look you in the eyes,” Bolton said. “I’m happy to give back and be that person.”
Fundraising
Cox said he relies heavily on volunteers, since he’s the only paid member of the kitchen staff. Money is always tight at Shalom; that’s just the nature of the business.
In order to alleviate the cost of about $1 a meal, Shalom has launched its annual Hunger Relief fundraising drive. This year, two donors have agreed to match 50 percent of every donation made now through April 30, up to a total of $30,000.
Shalom has also launched a social media campaign with another matching grant offer from Hand Up National Fund, a national nonprofit that supports local fundraising efforts. That campaign can be found at www.handup.org/campaigns/mealmatch.
To learn more or to donate to Shalom, visit www.shalomcommunitycenter.org .
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Source: The (Bloomington) Herald-Times, https://bit.ly/2n1lCPu
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Information from: The Herald Times, https://www.heraldtimesonline.com
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