AQA Food Preparation & Nutrition
Growing, cooking, and the GCSE that connects them.
What AQA Food Prep & Nutrition actually covers — the organic farming content that maps directly onto real home-ed projects, the coursework complication for private candidates, and how home-educated children are often better prepared for this qualification than school pupils.
More than cooking
AQA Food Preparation and Nutrition (8585) is frequently misread as a GCSE about cooking. It is not. It is a qualification that covers food science, human nutrition, food provenance, sustainability, and the social and ethical dimensions of what we eat — with practical food preparation threaded throughout. For home-educated children who grow food, cook from scratch, visit farms, and think seriously about where food comes from, it is a natural fit.
The specification has two examined components and two pieces of coursework (non-exam assessment). Unlike AQA Maths or English, the coursework component is substantial — 50% of the total GCSE — and this creates a specific challenge for private candidates that is worth understanding before you commit to this qualification.
Written exam · 1 hr 45 min · 100 marks · 50%
Principles of Food Preparation and Nutrition
Non-exam assessment · 50% of total GCSE
Two coursework tasks
Section 6.1 — the content home educators live
Section 6 of the AQA Food Prep specification — "Where food comes from" — is the part most school-based teachers find hardest to teach well. It requires genuine understanding of how food is produced, what organic certification means in practice, and the real environmental trade-offs involved. For home-educated children who grow food at home, visit farms, and understand composting and crop rotation from doing it, this section is already familiar territory.
"Section 6.1.1 is examinable content your child may already know by heart — if they've been growing food organically."
What the exam specifically covers
Crop rotation
Growing different crops in sequence across seasons to prevent soil depletion and reduce pest and disease buildup. Examinable as both a concept and an advantage of organic farming.
Leaving fallow
Resting fields between crops to allow natural nutrient recovery. One of the core organic soil management techniques the exam expects students to know and explain.
Biological pest control
Using natural predators instead of chemical pesticides. The classic exam example: a ladybird can eat more than 5,000 aphids in its lifetime. Students who have seen this in a garden understand it viscerally.
Composting and worm castings
Organic matter returned to the soil as natural fertiliser. The exam expects understanding of why this replaces artificial fertilisers and what it does for soil biology.
Row covers
Translucent barriers that protect crops from insects without chemicals. A practical organic pest control method the spec expects students to be able to name and explain.
Organic certification standards
What it means for food to be certified organic — no artificial fertilisers, no synthetic pesticides, no GMOs. Why organic food costs more and yields less per hectare, and the environmental trade-offs.
🌿 The LifeLearn connection
If your child is growing food at home — composting, controlling pests without chemicals, rotating beds, observing soil health — they are already building the practical knowledge this section of the exam tests. A growing project is not just a hands-on activity. Documented well, it becomes coursework evidence, compliance portfolio material, and direct exam preparation simultaneously. See the Real-World Projects guide (C-03) for how to structure projects that serve multiple purposes.
The coursework complication for private candidates
The non-exam assessment is the defining challenge of this qualification for home-educated students. Unlike AQA Maths or English, where private candidates sit written papers and that is essentially the whole picture, Food Prep & Nutrition requires 50% of the mark to come from supervised practical work assessed by a qualified centre. This cannot be completed at home or submitted independently.
⚠️ Before you commit to this qualification
Find an exam centre willing to supervise your child's NEA before registering. Ask specifically: can they supervise the Food Investigation task, including the practical experiments? Can they assess the Food Preparation Assessment with access to a kitchen? Not all centres that accept private candidates for written exams can accommodate the practical NEA requirements of this qualification. Some specialist home-ed exam providers can — but confirm this in writing before you plan around it.
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Task 1 — Food Investigation (15%)
A scientific investigation into a food science question set by AQA. The student designs and carries out practical experiments, photographs results, and writes a 1,500–2,000 word report. Needs centre supervision for the practical component. The report is written independently.
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Task 2 — Food Preparation Assessment (35%)
Students plan and cook a menu of dishes over a three-hour supervised session, demonstrating a range of skills against AQA's assessment criteria. Requires a properly equipped kitchen and a qualified assessor. This is the most practically demanding component to arrange as a private candidate.
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The written exam (50%)
Straightforward to arrange as a private candidate — same process as any other GCSE written paper. Find a registered centre, register by their deadline, sit the exam in the May/June series.
💡 An alternative worth knowing
Cambridge IGCSE Food and Nutrition (0648) covers very similar content and has a different coursework structure that some private candidates find more manageable. Edexcel GCSE Food Preparation and Nutrition also has NEA requirements but with slight structural differences. If your centre cannot supervise AQA's NEA, ask them which food qualification they can support before switching specification.
What to confirm before you register
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Does the centre have a kitchen available for the Food Preparation Assessment?
Not all exam centres do. The assessment requires a properly equipped teaching kitchen with workstations, cookers, refrigeration, and specialist equipment. Ask this before anything else.
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Can the centre supervise and assess the Food Investigation task?
The practical experiments need to be supervised by a qualified person and the centre is responsible for assessment against AQA's mark scheme. Confirm they have staff who can do this.
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When is NEA carried out — and can your child attend?
Centres typically complete NEA at a specific time of year, often fitting it around their own students' schedule. Private candidates may need to attend the centre multiple times over several weeks. Confirm the schedule and whether they can accommodate you before committing.
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What does the centre charge for NEA supervision?
Centres charge additional fees for supervising practical coursework beyond the standard private candidate fee. Get the full cost upfront — it can be significantly higher than for written-only qualifications.
What home educators are already doing well
Home-educated children who cook regularly, grow food, visit farms, and think seriously about nutrition are often ahead of school pupils on Section 6 (food provenance) and the practical Food Preparation Assessment. The exam rewards genuine knowledge and real skill — not rote learning of content presented in isolation.
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Grow food — and document it A seasonal growing project covering crop rotation, composting, biological pest control, and organic principles maps directly onto Section 6.1.1 of the exam. Photograph, record, and write about what you observe. This documentation also serves as compliance portfolio evidence (R-01) and could form part of the Food Investigation report.
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Cook with science in mind What happens to egg protein when it cooks? Why does bread rise? What makes pastry short? The Food Investigation task asks students to explore exactly these kinds of food science questions. Students who cook regularly and have been encouraged to ask why things happen are well prepared.
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Visit farms — especially organic ones A farm visit that covers organic certification, soil management, and pest control provides direct experiential knowledge of exam content. Many organic farms offer educational visits. The LifeLearn directory lists providers who run farm-based learning experiences. See C-03 Real-World Projects for how to structure these as documented learning.
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Use the AQA specification as a reading guide Download the AQA Food Preparation and Nutrition specification (free at aqa.org.uk) and work through Section 6 — "Where food comes from" — as a structured study guide. Past papers are also free and show exactly how organic farming content is examined.
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CGP GCSE Food Preparation and Nutrition revision guide Clear, subject-specific, and structured around the AQA specification. Covers all sections including the organic farming and food provenance content in Section 6. Buy the AQA-specific edition.
Find a food and farming provider near you
The LifeLearn directory lists organic farms, food educators, and home-ed providers running cooking and growing sessions across the UK — DBS-checked and parent-reviewed.