• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Lifestyle

Retired rugby player honours mother’s legacy through food

28th May 2020
Agripreneur 101: A skincare producer who trusts nature

Agripreneur 101: A skincare producer who trusts nature

23rd May 2022
Potato cyst nematodes are microscopic worm-like pests that lie dormant inside mature cysts and then migrate into potato roots causing irreparable damage to the roots. Photo: Supplied/FoodForAfrika.com

Banana paper could save Africa’s potatoes from worms

23rd May 2022

Don’t harp on your problems, says proud NW pig farmer

23rd May 2022
Over the past decades the agriculture sector has abandoned rail transport, choosing to rather truck commodities by road. A new rail policy is setting out to make the railways an attractive alternative again. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Transport: ‘Farmers will benefit by switching from road to rail’

23rd May 2022
North West farmers are set to enjoy better services from agricultural extension officers. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

North West to appoint more agri extension officers

23rd May 2022
In this week's Gather To Grows twitter session, PJ Phiri, aquaponics horticulturalist and Michele Carelse, founder of feelgood health unpack with hosts Gugulethu Mahlangu and Dawn Noemdoe the 101 on farming for new farmers. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

This week’s agriculture events: 23 to 27 May 2022

23rd May 2022
Weekend podcast: Get Global GAP certification this way

Weekend podcast: Get Global GAP certification this way

22nd May 2022
Dr Harry Malila, Head of Department and Accounting Officer for the Department of the Premier, Mayor Alderman Franken and minister of agriculture Ivan Meyer showing off freshly made sausage and patti. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Mobile factory brings agri-processing to rural farmers

21st May 2022
Lauren Strever of amorentia sweet dragon fruit estate and Nursery, Micheal Muller of Muller familie boerdery trust and Stephen Mantsho of the South African avocado growers association. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Farmer 101: Holy guacemole! Growing avos worth a try

20th May 2022
The North West department of agriculture and rural development has been allocated a budget of R1.2 billion to spend in the new financial year. However, they have days to report back on how exactly they plant to use this money. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Portfolio committee not letting NW officials off the hook

20th May 2022

This chef is taking fine dining in Kimberley to the top

20th May 2022

Recipe: Butternut soup to go absolutely nuts for

20th May 2022
  • Home
  • News
  • Changemakers
  • Lifestyle
  • Farmer’s Inside Track
  • Food for Thought
11 GLOBAL MEDIA AWARDS
Mon, May 23, 2022
Food For Mzansi
  • Home
  • News
  • Changemakers
    • All
    • AgriCareers
    • Entrepreneurs
    • Farmers
    • Groundbreakers
    • Innovators
    • Inspiration
    • It Takes a Village
    • Mentors
    • Movers and Shakers
    • Partnerships
    Agripreneur 101: A skincare producer who trusts nature

    Agripreneur 101: A skincare producer who trusts nature

    Don’t harp on your problems, says proud NW pig farmer

    A burning passion for education and agriculture made it easy for Evelyn Fisher to fulfil her aspirations in the form of an agri academy. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

    Starting her agri academy a lifelong dream fulfilled

    Driving local food security through research

    InnoFoodAfrica project brings food security home

    Iris Telmaggiers (fright), Sophie Sauir and Leoni Pasja harvesting green peppers from Sauir’s garden. Photo: Siphokazi Mnyobe

    Vegetable garden helps Iris cope with son’s death

    Agripreneur 101: Balance is key for this cannabis skincare producer

    Agripreneur 101: Meet a cannabis skincare producer

    Dr Obvious Mapiye, whose studies helped develop new livestock management software. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

    Dr Mapiye’s driven to help small-scale farmers commercialise

    Paballo Khoza is harvesting lettuce on his 6 000 square metre shade-netted farm in Westonaria Agri-Park. Photo: Magnificent Mndebele/Food For Mzansi

    Sweat, tears and dreadful walks: Khoza finally triumphs

    ‘Dream, then pursue it,’ urges tomato farmer

  • Lifestyle
  • Farmer’s Inside Track
  • Food for Thought
No Result
View All Result
Food For Mzansi
Home Lifestyle Mzansi Flavour

Retired rugby player honours mother’s legacy through food

by Noluthando Ngcakani
28th May 2020
in Mzansi Flavour
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A

Retired rugby player Ricky Schroeder draws his cooking inspiration from his mother - Rika Schroeder.

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Social media is abuzz with “lockdown chefs” who have taken to the kitchen to express their creativity. For many, cooking has become more than a hobby, it has been a way to stay sane during the lockdown period.  

Such is the case for radio presenter and retired rugby player Ricky Schroeder, who says cooking has become his “zen”. 

For Schroeder, life before the lockdown was filled with the hustle and bustle of his career as a radio personality for Cape Town-based radio station KFM.  

ADVERTISEMENT

He rarely had the time for a mental wellness check, he says. But since the national lockdown, cooking has become his escape.  

“When I am cooking, it’s my me time. My good friend and I have this inside joke where we call ‘me time’ a ‘me audit’. When I am cooking it gives me a chance to really reflect about where I am at, to be present in the moment. To quiet down my busy lifestyle where I am always chasing and pursuing and really reflect.” 

Cooking is not just for survival. Cooking is life, believes the avid home cook.  

Being cooped up in his familial home in the Western Cape with his dad Derrick and brother Clyde has been the source of inspiration behind his rekindled fondness for kitchen experimentation. 

“This lockdown period has made [food] a passion for me. In the beginning it was just for survival, because hey you need to eat!” he bursts out in laughter.  

  • READ MORE: Ricky Schroeder’s lockdown oxtail potjiekos

His mother, Rika Schroeder, taught him everything he knows about cooking. While playing rugby for the Eastern Province Kings, Schroeder’s mother had fallen ill in 2017. He decided to retire. A year later, she passed away. Now he cooks to keep her memory alive.  

“For me it’s just about continuing her legacy. A few weeks before she passed, I literally told her that the reason we are where we are is because of the sacrifices she has made for us. 

“It’s just about honoring her legacy as I go on as well.”  

Schroeder was born in Worcester and enjoyed a fairly typical childhood. “We loved food in our house and had a wonderful, supportive mom and dad.” 

ADVERTISEMENT

Although his parents encouraged him to pursue his rugby career, they also motivated him to seek out other passions like public speaking. Today he is a radio broadcaster, motivational speaker and TV personality.  

Schroeder’s rugby career started at the tender age of six. His passion for the sport saw his talent cultivated at the Paul Roos Gymnasium school in Stellenbosch, which is known for producing some of Mzansi’s best rugby players.  

ADVERTISEMENT
Ricky Schroeder has played rugby since the age of 6.

He matriculated in 2009 and later studied at the University of Cape Town. But opportunity knocked and Schroeder sought out greener pastures in Johannesburg, to start his professional rugby career as a scrum half for the Lions.  

With his rugby career, his relationship with food was based purely on survival. But this changed over time when he had to feed himself.  

“When I lived on my own, I used to call my mom all the time asking her for inspiration on what to cook.”  

“I always remember coming home on weekends. There would always be a wholesome meal waiting for me and my favorite was usually the green bean lamb stew that my mom used to make for me.” 

His dad is not a bad cook either.  “He is now the boffin at making curries, he can make a mean curry biryani.” 

Schroeder’s fondest memory of the kitchen are moments with his mother. “We used to sokkie in the kitchen together and really just have a good time while we were cooking together.” 

“Now I try and sokkie with my dad a bit, but the man is a bit challenged when it comes to the dancing,” he jokes.  

  • READ MORE: Lamb potjiekos recipe
Tags: Boland CaveliersCape TownCurrie CupDerrick SchroederGolden LionsJohannesburgKfmPaul Roos Gymnasiumradio personalityRicky SchroederRika SchroederStellenboschWellingtonWestern CapeWorcester
Share196Tweet123Send
Noluthando Ngcakani

Noluthando Ngcakani

With roots in the Northern Cape, this Kimberley Diamond has had a passion for telling human interest stories since she could speak her first words. A foodie by heart, she began her journalistic career as an intern at the SABC where she discovered her love for telling agricultural, community and nature related stories. Not a stranger to a challenge Ngcakani will go above and beyond to tell your truth.

Related Posts

Dr Harry Malila, Head of Department and Accounting Officer for the Department of the Premier, Mayor Alderman Franken and minister of agriculture Ivan Meyer showing off freshly made sausage and patti. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Mobile factory brings agri-processing to rural farmers

by Staff Reporter
21st May 2022
0

An agri-processing facility on wheels will bring equipment closer to small-scale farmers in the rural Overberg area of the Western...

Winter weather is coming, and farmers are advised to stay informed and to prepared as best they could to safeguard their fields and animals. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Weather warning: ‘Be extra cautious for pests, diseases’

by Nicole Ludolph
20th May 2022
0

As Mzansi braces itself for winter to arrive in full force, the National Agro-meteorological Committee warns that farmers should be...

Dr Ilse Trautmann, Donald Matheson, Jan Boome and Prime Minister Jan Jambon of Flanders during the official start of construction on a new processing plant near Wolseley in the Western Cape. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Belgian business to bring jobs to rural Western Cape

by Duncan Masiwa
29th Apr 2022
0

An investment of R170 million in the deciduous fruit-producing region of Ceres in the Western Cape is hailed as another...

The Western Cape department of agriculture signed agreements last week with the National Wool Growers Association, Deciduous Fruit Producers Trust, Vinpro, the South African Table Grape Industry, South African Poultry Association, Potatoes SA, Raisins SA and Grain SA. Photo: Supplied/Hortgro

Commodity groups recommit to supporting new farmers

by Staff Reporter
28th Apr 2022
0

A rundown of news you may have missed this week: Commodity groups and the Western Cape department of agriculture sign...

Over the past decades the agriculture sector has abandoned rail transport, choosing to rather truck commodities by road. A new rail policy is setting out to make the railways an attractive alternative again. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi
News

Transport: ‘Farmers will benefit by switching from road to rail’

by Zolani Sinxo
23rd May 2022
0

A new policy that aims to revitalise rail transport through partial privatisation can help the agriculture sector save on transport...

Read more
North West farmers are set to enjoy better services from agricultural extension officers. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

North West to appoint more agri extension officers

23rd May 2022
In this week's Gather To Grows twitter session, PJ Phiri, aquaponics horticulturalist and Michele Carelse, founder of feelgood health unpack with hosts Gugulethu Mahlangu and Dawn Noemdoe the 101 on farming for new farmers. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

This week’s agriculture events: 23 to 27 May 2022

23rd May 2022
Weekend podcast: Get Global GAP certification this way

Weekend podcast: Get Global GAP certification this way

22nd May 2022
Dr Harry Malila, Head of Department and Accounting Officer for the Department of the Premier, Mayor Alderman Franken and minister of agriculture Ivan Meyer showing off freshly made sausage and patti. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Mobile factory brings agri-processing to rural farmers

21st May 2022

Perfect fuel storm in the road freight, logistics industry

5 global export bans that shook SA agriculture

Vegetable garden helps Iris cope with son’s death

Starting her agri academy a lifelong dream fulfilled

‘Patel, don’t forget sugarcane Master Plan commitments’

This week’s agriculture events: 23 to 27 May 2022

THE NEW FACE OF SOUTH AFRICAN AGRICULTURE

With 11 global awards in the first three years of its existence, Food For Mzansi is much more than an agriculture publication. It is a movement, unashamedly saluting the unsung heroes of South African agriculture. We believe in the power of agriculture to promote nation building and social cohesion by telling stories that are often overlooked by broader society.

Agripreneur 101: A skincare producer who trusts nature

Banana paper could save Africa’s potatoes from worms

Don’t harp on your problems, says proud NW pig farmer

Transport: ‘Farmers will benefit by switching from road to rail’

North West to appoint more agri extension officers

This week’s agriculture events: 23 to 27 May 2022

  • Our Story
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Copyright

Contact us
Office: +27 21 879 1824
WhatsApp line: +27 81 889 9032
Marketing: +27 71 147 0388
News: info@foodformzansi.co.za
Advertising: sales@foodformzansi.co.za

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Changemakers
  • Lifestyle
  • Farmer’s Inside Track
  • Food for Thought

Copyright © 2021 Food for Mzansi

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version