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Chef Jose Andres, World Central Kitchen activate hurricane food supplies for storm victims

A group of culinary school students helped cook hot meals.

September 30, 2022, 2:22 PM

World Central Kitchen has activated its network of chef resources in Florida to help feed hard-hit communities in the wake of Hurricane Ian.

PHOTO: Flooding in Port Charlotte from Hurricane Ian.
Flooding in Port Charlotte from Hurricane Ian.
World Central Kitchen

The storm made landfall Wednesday afternoon as a Category 4 hurricane, bringing damaging winds and massive flooding, and leaving millions of people without power as well as compromised access to food. Ian was downgraded to a tropical storm on Thursday but has since regained strength and been upgraded to a Category 1 hurricane as it heads toward the Carolinas.

World Central Kitchen -- the nonprofit organization backed by celebrity chef Jose Andres, which helps get food to first responders and residents after natural disasters -- began mobilizing chefs in affected areas on Thursday, as the storm damage was surveyed.

PHOTO: Volunteers make sandwiches with World Central Kitchen after Hurricane Ian.
Volunteers make sandwiches with World Central Kitchen after Hurricane Ian.
World Central Kitchen
PHOTO: A volunteer helps cook food for World Central Kitchen in Florida.
A volunteer helps cook food for World Central Kitchen in Florida.
World Central Kitchen

"World Central Kitchen's Relief Team has set up a kitchen in Tampa, where sandwiches and hot meals are being produced," a representative for the organization told ABC News.

PHOTO: Jake Moses, 19, left, and Heather Jones, 18, of Fort Myers, explore a section of destroyed businesses at Fort Myers Beach, Fla., on Sep 29, 2022, following Hurricane Ian.
Jake Moses, 19, left, and Heather Jones, 18, of Fort Myers, explore a section of destroyed businesses at Fort Myers Beach, Fla., on Sep 29, 2022, following Hurricane Ian.
Douglas R. Clifford/AP

During the first day of meal distribution, the World Central Kitchen team prepared to make at least 20,000 meals.

The organization told ABC News they are focused on areas between Tampa and Naples, including Fort Myers, Cape Coral and Sarasota.

"In addition to cooking from the WCK Field Kitchen, the team is scaling up through food trucks, restaurants, and caterers to meet the need as it increases," the representative said.

World Central Kitchen has deployed its chefs and volunteers into the field following other recent disasters, including amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Most recently, the team served up meals and delivered food to residents and emergency crews in Bermuda, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and Nova Scotia who were impacted by Hurricane Fiona, and to those in Pakistan affected by recent severe flooding.

The organization also continues to provide food and relief to those in Ukraine affected by the war with Russia, and to other communities around the world.