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Better School Food Equals More Local Farms
Last week, U.S. Senator Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.), Chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, unveiled the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010, which provides $4.5 billion in new child nutrition program funding over ten years. It says on Lincoln's website: "This legislation will also mark the first time since the inception of the National School Lunch Program that Congress has dedicated this level of resources to increasing the program's reimbursement rate."
Currently, the National School Lunch Program feeds nearly 31 million students every day for $9.3 billion per year. At the end of February, President Barack Obama proposed a $1 billion a year increase ($10 billion over ten years) in funding for U.S. child nutrition programs including school lunches. Sounds like a lot. But $1 billion, it turns out, really only boils down to an extra twenty cents per school meal. Right now, the reimbursement rate per meal is $2.68, and less than a dollar of that goes towards actual food. The rest is spent on infrastructure. Many school food advocates believe that serving wholesome, nutritious meals for under $3 is just not possible and there has been a rallying cry for more - up to a $1 more per child's meal.
Fred Kirschenmann, Distinguished Fellow of the Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture and President of Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture, once told me if the USDA did nothing else than change the food served in schools, then he would be happy because "to change the school lunch program, USDA Secretary Vilsack will have to change the infrastructure that delivers the food to our schools and that will change the food system because it will provide many new opportunities for farmers to get food they produce to consumers, and I think that will encourage more of our young want-to-bes to begin farming."
That statement seems fairly profound - that by changing our school food we could actually change this nation's agricultural system by empowering local farms with local school dollars. So how exactly would an increase, if it actually happened, in the National School Lunch Program change or impact local farm production? Would biodiversity increase? Would commodity crops disappear to make room for more fruit and vegetables? How would the relationship between the schools and the farmers change?
Here are a few answers to those questions from leaders in the school food movement:
Chef Timothy Cipriano:
Yes, if schools trend to purchase more local seasonal products, I think this will shift the emphasis from corporate farms to more local farms. American public schools feed 31.5 million school lunches annually, this accounts for A LOT of food. This past year we already increased our local farm purchases to 48,000 pounds which includes things like 300 cases of apples (that's 12,000 lbs or 36,000 apples), 300 cases of pears, 75 cases of peaches, 100 cases of green beans, 100 cases of potatoes, and more than 6500 pounds of butternut squash, 400 pounds of tomatoes, 135 bags of corn, and quite a few cases of miscellaneous items such as cukes, eggplant, green and yellow squash, peppers, kale, and cabbage. We are working collaboratively with local community groups to start our own farm which will be split into a 5 acre educational farm where the students will grow whatever they want, and a 35-40 acre production farm where we will grow vegetables to serve in our schools. We will start with basic ingredients like tomatoes, onions, peppers, herbs, etc. to produce marinara sauce and salsa while we work with local processors to produce these in bulk for us to use in our schools. We are also looking to market and sell the marinara sauce and salsas in local stores to generate revenue for the farm. Currently we buy a lot from Connecticut farms but I would like to see more greenhouse crops offered year round. We could, with proper storage, move to serving exclusively local products, albeit processed and frozen. In addition, this $1 increase would also allow us the opportunity to run our business more efficiently, with up to date equipment that is Energy star rated or more green at least and utilizes less gas, electricity, etc. The payoff in the end is healthier children, cleaner air and a system that is not broken. I feel strongly that we are in the best shape ever when it comes to seeing real change happen with the USDA, The White House, and Congress all on a path to change. With the support of many organizations including School Nutrition Association, Food Research & Action Center, School Food Focus and others all working together as a team, we will see a real change very soon.
Tim Cipriano is the Executive Director of Food Services for New Haven Public Schools in New Haven, Connecticut and was just in Washington DC to attend the School Nutrition Association's Legislative Action Conference, and met with USDA Under Secretary Kevin Concannon and Chef Sam Kass, the Assistant Chef and Food Initiative Coordinator for The White House who is working directly with the First Lady on the Let's Move campaign.
Chef Ann Cooper:
History and experience tells me that we really need this additional $1 per child meal. The reimbursement rate is $2.86 but most of that goes for labor and equipment and only 90 cents or so is left, in LA its 96 cents. The extra $1 will put us at $3.70 per meal.
I have always advocated for fresh foods. Fresh foods, whole grains, kids need these things, whether it's a fresh mango in Florida or a fresh garbanzo bean in Minnesota. One major impact on farming will be that we will be taking commodity crops out of production and instead plant real food. The five top commodity crops in this country, corn, soy, wheat, rice and cotton, we don't eat most of that. We need to grow more crops that we can actually eat. This $1 per child meal increase will most definitely increase biodiversity and increase the amount of crop land dedicated to real foods.
We won't be putting any farmer out of business who currently is growing all commodity crops. Farmers will be doing business in different ways. And we will be giving new opportunities to small farmers. Here in Boulder, Colorado, we are hoping to work with a farm that has 40 acres of productive land. We have 28,000 kids here, so 40 acres would make a huge difference and will produce a tremendous amount of what we need. Farmers often tell me we helped to save their farms. In New York, you have a more limited growing season but schools could help fill the gap from what a small farmer can earn at a farmers market. He or she can still participate in the farmers market but for instance the schools could buy that last 500 pounds of potatoes or carrots at the end of the season instead of going to waste.
Ann Cooper is the Renegade Lunch Lady, interim director of nutrition services at the Boulder Valley School District in Colorado and is the founder of TheLunchBox.org, a Web site that advocates healthier school lunches.
Debra Eschmeyer:
School meals are a vehicle for a healthier and wiser tomorrow exemplified by the Farm to School programs growing nationwide. Farm to school provides a snap shot of what our future food system should look like, not just local sustainable foods in the cafeteria, but complementary food, agriculture, and garden-based education within the classroom and community teaching children lifelong healthy eating habits. Currently, in the Child Nutrition Reauthorization, we have strong bills in the Senate, S. 3123, and House, H.R. 4710, to support that would create a competitive Farm to School grant program, so more schools could start programs. As Representative Holt says, "Farm to school programs exemplify the best use of federal school lunch dollars.
Debra Eschmeyer is the Marketing & Media Manager of the National Farm to School Network and the Center for Food & Justice and works from a fifth-generation family farm in Ohio. She recently wrote about School Lunch Reform in The Huffington Post.
Anthony Geraci:
I've already made a commitment to buy locally - we are the first place to spend $1.5 million dollars this year on local produce, which is up from $25,000 last year. I buy local bread, I buy local milk, so combined I already spend $5.5 million on local foods total. I'd like to spend the other $8-10 million on protein like chickens. So waiting on someone in Washington to change the infrastructure for us, well we have decided to change it ourselves. They will be watching us very closely to see how we are doing it. We have great farms, we have great farmers. We want to put our dollars to use here, empower an atmosphere of biodiversity. Instead of just talking about things we want to do, we actually do them. And we have been doing them, and that is the story of success in the Baltimore program. It can't be perfect so let's just move forward with it and stop blaming it on everyone else. 1 in 3 kids born after the year 2000 will get diabetes type 2, 1 in 2 African American kids will get it. That is staggering. We can't keep pumping them full of fat and sugar and expect it to go away.
So here's the deal, let's take chicken for example. The government gives you the commodity in lieu of cash, chicken instead of money. By the time I can use it, it actually costs more than the local chicken. There are more chickens than people in the state of Maryland. Why am I buying chicken from Arkansas and having it shipped across the country, why can't I buy local chickens? I just left a meeting with the USDA and we are working on a project called Maryland's Best Brand, taking 5 crops that we grow well here - corn, green beans, tomatoes, peas, carrots. Rather than us putting money into shipping the food out of state, we are going to contract the farmers to grow our stuff. The farmer benefits and we create jobs around processing, we lower our operating costs and the tax dollars stay local. That's happening with or without the federal money. I caution my colleagues to not sit around and wait for money, it might not come. Our kids are hungry, so let's get off our butts and start working with our resources that we have right now, and if the money comes, that's awesome.
As Director of Food and Nutrition of Baltimore City Public Schools, Tony Geraci has ensured that more than 80,000 Baltimore students now have access to fresh fruits and vegetables every school day and founded the Great Kids Farm, a working organic farm and education center that trains future urban farmers and provides food for the school system's cafeterias.
Frederick Kirschenmann:
The industrial food system is now so concentrated and centralized that it makes it very difficult for farmers to obtain a fair share of the food dollar. Farmers are essentially raw-material suppliers into a food chain that demands that food be "cheap." But we do not have a cheap food policy; we have a cheap labor and raw materials policy. And since farmers have no market power they always get squeezed at the end of the chain. But the new emerging food demand is whole, fresh, food, produced in an environmentally sustainable manner and one which consumers have access to and can have a trusting relationship with. A new infrastructure that would serve our school lunch programs would provide young farmers with a new opportunity to enter such relationships and be part of a new food system that gave the growing number of consumers what want to know where their food comes from what they want.
One of the big problems facing young farmers who want to grow food for people is transaction costs-the costs involved in getting food from field to table. Right now there is little infrastructure in place to provide such services in an efficient manner. Almost all infrastructure in place today is designed for undifferentiated commodity production-farmers can deliver bulk grain or livestock to grain elevators, or livestock sale barns or packing plants. But there is little to no infrastructure for farmers to deliver food produced locally, and virtually no delivery system which could aggregate their production to deliver efficiently. Farmers Markets and CSA's are their only options. Food distribution companies like SYSCO are designed to deliver large quantities of food that can be picked up and delivered at centralized facilities. Some experiments are taking place to develop more localized distribution systems but the demand at the moment does not justify large expenditures. So if the public school system were to develop such infrastructures farmers could then piggy-back on to them. Of course, farmers would also need to aggregate by forming cooperatives or other business relationships and pool their production so that distribution companies could pick up product from one location instead of going to every farm-which becomes cost-prohibitive for them. Increasingly health care institutions, like hospitals, are interested in buying fresher, whole foods from local farmers, but the distribution system is not in place for them to do so efficiently.
Fred Kirschenmann is the Distinguished Fellow of the Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture, President of Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture, and a third-generation organic farmer, who grew up on a farm in North Dakota and whose childhood diet subsisted on foods grown on their property.
Chef Bill Telepan:
It would be better than it is now - more farmers in the Northeast will stick around and not sell their land. I think the small farms will become the medium farms, and that's a good thing cause then there is more land being farmed. If we have more diverse products we wouldn't have these giant agrifarms that grow lettuce that gets bagged and shipped across the country. Really, we could use more colorful vegetables. When you think about the spectrum of colors, the different vegetables that are so colorful, you aren't seeing that in schools. So getting turnips, beets, celery root, veggies that kids don't know, would be huge. Why not Swiss chard or collard greens? Oh, and fresh corn. Even different kinds of potatoes - in fact, fresh potatoes would be a good start, not frozen French fries.
If we could get a dollar more per meal, I believe it would allow schools to have their suppliers buy more locally with more diversity. I really hope they can do something about the meat. Especially the beef. I would just love to see a real hamburger, for instance, that's not processed. A grass fed beef hamburger on a real bun and the kids would love it. Right now in school cafeterias, the meat they buy, in order to get a better yield out of it, they'll add cheaper stuff to it. So they'll make chicken nuggets with corn syrup and soy protein. The beef has soy protein added to it. So when you have a 3 oz hamburger you are actually only getting 1.5 oz of meat and the rest is filler. It's ok to use regular chicken, it doesn't have to be organic chicken, as long as it's just chicken and not ground up with processed stuff. I'd like to see more things on the menu that are healthy and simple - and serving a protein, a vegetable, a salad and a starch that are all made from scratch.
Bill Telepan, the Owner and Chef of Telepan restaurant in New York City and Board Member of Wellness in Schools, recently visited Washington DC as a member of NYC Alliance for CNR, asking members of Congress to consider an increase in the reimbursement rate for The National School Lunch Program.
Josh Viertel:
Nationwide, our schools serve more than 7 billion meals per year. That's enormous, unparalleled purchasing power. Just imagine if 10 percent of schools had the resources to make meals from unprocessed ingredients bought directly from local farms. That's an economic stimulus package that would completely transform farm economies and rural communities.
If Congress allocated $1 more per meal, schools would be able to buy more of the foods we see at farmer's markets: vegetables, fruit, pasture-raised meat and dairy. In addition to funding, we also need incentives so schools use their funds to buy real food. With these incentives in place, farmers would be asked to grow more apples, carrots, lettuce, sweet potatoes - the kind of vegetables that are easy to cook in large quantities and that kids like to eat.
Increasing funding would enable more schools to cook meals from scratch and use whole ingredients. As a result, we'd see an increase in demand to grow the diverse mix of fruits and vegetables that make up a healthy diet and kids would change their behavior and appreciation of these foods over time.
If schools consistently bought locally grown food, farmers would be able to take advantage of this substantial market for their crops - and in some cases, wouldn't have to go through big national distributors. They'd have the security of knowing their crops will be sold, and the added benefit of saving money on marketing and retail packaging. In particular, this would be a boon for mid-sized farms that have the capacity to work with local school cafeterias and grow crops that match their needs.
Right now, farmers make about 19 cents of every dollar spent on food. The rest goes to marketing, distribution and processing. A farmer who sells directly to a school (or joins a cooperative that handles some of the distribution) will see a much bigger percentage of that dollar, because there are no middlemen.
As President of Slow Food USA, Josh Viertel launched Time For Lunch which asks citizens to sign their petition, contact their legislators and join Eat-In protest/potlucks across the country, demanding a good, clean, and fair food system for kids.
- Posted in



20 Comments so far
Show AllIn addition to local farms, I recommend that people who live in homes with gardens team up and help thy neighbors out on gardening for more local produce. Don't do it for profit. Do it for both the well-being of yourself and each other. Grow your own produce if you can and team up with your neighbors and others in your community to donate to your local public schools. It may look daunting at first but success is possible. It takes self-confidence, team work, and team confidence to succeed. Good luck to all of us.
Stanley, I'm smiling. That's so yes!
Yes, do it for yourselves and your neighbor, and do it for America too. This is the new revolution. It doesn't come with a guy on a horse shouting "the British are coming," just a quiet movement to stuff that makes sense all over.
And linking the schools and local farmers. That's more educational than the curriculum imo.
Good luck to all of us indeed!
www.RadicalRelocalization.com
Thanks for the site. This is the second online info given, the first given by another user in the form of a brochure. I hope more people wake up and realize this.
Beautiful Ideas indeed.
Stanly always comes up with those -- and they ARE realistic and practical and very NATURAL.
why aren't there more americans like that LEADING ?
Thanks teddy and thanks for the articles on the French vs American diet in schools as well. My niece visited France herself as part of her vacation to Europe. I don't know if she got to visit any of the schools but she felt great leaving the country for a while. I can't blame her for getting so sick and tired of people laughing about Europe even as this country sinks. She even went to South Africa and not too long ago wrote me a letter about life there. I can't tell you how disgusted I am with the health care mess in this country on insurance, drugs, and food. Hopefully, this recent bill Obama just signed into law will force people to realize that all insurance is scam. In the meantime, we need all to put all the ideas for local food that we can get to use. I don't know if this country can keep running on oil much longer.
This is so awesome, all these ideas! This would really go well with Michelle Obama's fight against childhood obesity. We cannot conquer obesity until we improve the quality of food we are feeding to our children. These children would grow up to demand healthier food in their college cafeterias and local restaurants. In fact, we could reverse the trend of the last 30 years. Wonderful.
what happened to everyone packing their own lunch? that way everyone gets whatever they think is healthy for them.
That idea is good too and certainly parents need to do more of it but that doesn't mean that schools should wash off their hands on their part on being responsible for providing students with healthy food.
and let's look at it another way. the school's business is to teach kids not feed them. the sooner the schools get out of the feeding and all sorts of other touchy/feely business the sooner they can start focusing on teaching.
That is totally callous to say that schools should not feed students. Feeding kids local foods does not cost as much as feeding them corporate junk food. You can make up bs about "personal responsibility" but when we're in a society where parents are poorly informed about what to feed their children or some children are under the custody of guardians who don't take care, a little help from schools would go a long way. Thanks to your libertarian policies, everything is a failure. Food isn't the cause for schools failing to teach in case you didn't know.
Sorry, but the school is there to educate children.
If some charitable organization wants to feed the poor they are free to do it and would gladly contribute to it. Let's try and focus on teaching and less on pampering egos.
By the way, I totally agree with you that the school lunch program is not the main culprit in the dismal quality of education in the US. You are actually touching on one of the problems when you say "parents are poorly informed" and "a little help from scools". A lot parents nowadays think the school is there to raise their kids. Wrong. The school is supposed to educate them. Not sure if I expressed myself correctly but I hope you got my point.
Also, the schools are trying to teach to the lowest common denominator, thus dumbing everyone down. I guess so as not to hurt the ego of the less bright pupils. When a course called "College Algebra" at a community college teaches quadratic equations and the students ate amazed at what that is, you'd think people would wake up and see there's a systemic problem here.
THE FRENCH BEG TO DIFFER.
apparently they consider School Lunch , STATE SUBSIDIZED , as CENTRAL and ESSENTIAL to "learning". -- they in fact use lunches as teaching modes:
how to socialize , how to share, how to eat PROPERLY, how to have good eating habits and etiquette, how food is PREPARED , WHAT is food, and the older they grow it is connected to the SCIENCE of biology, food, farming, eating, how NOT to have to GRAB food more than you can really finish or need...WITHOUT screaming at them (another social teaching of good social behavior) , PATIENCE, NOT RUSHING through the eating and THEREFORE though LIFE....cooking...conceivably -- widening the children's understanding of other disciplines such as chemistry, mathematics...etc
it is simply the American LIMITED VIEW that thinks that things are DISCONNECTED from each other. pegging them into cubby holes.
on the contrary - the school lunches for French children seem to produce students and professionals that are HIGHLY educated, THINKING and analytical..compared to americans.
if anything - in comparison - at least in comparing these "first -world" comparisons :
it is the USA the americans that are BARBARIC compared to the french.
While that is a great idea, part of the purpose of the school lunch program is to provide low-income children with at least one nutritious meal per day. This program has been expanded to include breakfasts as well. Unfortunately today 1 in 5 children faces going without food each day, and 1 in 8 adults are food deprived - I hate the word insecure because it is not accurate - each day. This program is suppose to help feed the children whose families cannot feed them because of economic deprivation through joblessness or homelessness.
I think you would find that the 31 million children noted in the article refers primarily to those children whose families cannot provide the lunches for them directly, but the program has been used to feed all the children for years now regardless of family circumstances. Many children do bring their lunches, but the school lunch programs allows for children to not be stigmatized by not having a lunch or breakfast due to poverty. Sadly, these programs do not provide a truly nutritious meal, mostly because of guidelines established by the HHS and USDA based on corporate income, not nutritionist input. If school districts want to provide something different, like localized foods, they need to insure that they meet the criteria set out by the government and sometimes that is more difficult than many realize.
We need to take the government controls on things like nutrition and curriculum out of our schools - let parents and school districts decide where their children's food should come from and what the school can do to best educate our children. It is apparent that the government's interference in our local school districts through control of the purse strings has harmed our children, and it must stop now if we are to continue to be a leading nation of the world.
Thank you djnoll. I couldn't have said it any better. I wished people would see the whole picture. It is rather ironic to witness the same government washing its hands off of health care but at the same time sticking its hands into depriving public education in all directions.
Industrialized farming has reached it's zenith. But I am hopeful. For despite best efforts at corporate opaqueness, information is leaking out about what industrial farming does to the land, to the animals and, of course to our bodies. Here on the coast just south of San Francisco, scores of sustainable farms are springing up. These are farms run by folks who aren't just interested in the label. They are close to the land... driven by quality of life issues. Is it tough to make a buck? Yup. But Slow Money people are teaming with Slow Food folks to create a different model... where a 5 year "big exit" is not the goal. The most exciting aspect of all this is the opportunity to change other elements of American culture beyond what we eat. By making DIFFERENT food choices, labor, environmental, and animal rights issues all come to the forefront.
Sound too optimistic? Maybe. But I publish an audiomagazine for kids (boomkids.com). We're doing an entire 70 minute CD/download about various elements of this new wave. And I guarantee you: Kids get it. David Strohm
AMERICA -- YOU ARE THE MOST POWERFUL RICHEST COUNTRY ON EARTH......
so -- please don't be alarmed at what the FRENCH CHILDREN eat for school lunch. OK?
======================
School lunch abroad
Another way to eat
By Deborah Madison
September 6, 2007
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Back to school means back to school lunch. Here’s a meal that has been rightfully singled out as being highly problematic. After all, it’s basically fast food — fatty, highly processed, and very caloric. It’s the recommended diet for those who want to become obese and possibly develop diabetes. Truly, school lunch is one of our country’s greatest shames, especially given that we know it is harmful and that we also know what kids need to be well-nourished.
This spring I joined the International Exchange Forum on Children, Obesity, Food Choice, and the Environment in France’s Loire Valley, where 16 of us met first with each other, then with our French counterparts working in diet and health, and finally in the lunchrooms of two schools. The school lunches we ate were meals I’d be proud to serve.
At one school, students were served a choice of salads — mâche with smoked duck and fava beans, or mâche with smoked salmon and asparagus — followed by guinea fowl with roasted potatoes and carrots and steamed broccoli. For dessert, there was a choice of ripe, red-throughout strawberries or clafoutis. A pungent washed-rind cheese was offered, along with French bread and water. Yes, the kids took and ate the cheese.
French schoolchildren eat in brightly colored lunchrooms. Lunch hour includes exercise and lasts for two hours.
Our second meal was a little simpler, but then, the kids were younger, too. Children served themselves a butter lettuce salad from a bowl set on the table. The main dish was mashed potatoes with a sauce of ground beef (delicious!). Bread and water again were offered as well as the pungent cheese, and a choice of fresh strawberries or a little pastry.
In addition to the goodness of the food, there were other good things about these school lunches. First of all, they weren’t rushed. About two hours are given for lunch, a portion of which is used for very loud and active exercise. Second, they were civilized. Food was served on heated plates; real silverware and glasses — not plastic — were used; and the lunchrooms were pretty and comfortable for the kids.
Instead of teachers blowing whistles and yelling at kids to stop (teachers ate in their own rooms), there was a cadre of women whom I called “the lunch moms,” who, as far as I could tell, were there simply to be helpful. (I’m not sure if they were actually mothers of children at the school.)
These people picked up fallen jackets and sweaters, helped smaller children with their food, set the table for the four-year-olds, answered questions, and would no doubt wipe away tears. One child had brought his lunch, but a school mom transferred it to a plate, like the other kids had.
I watched another “mom” encourage two girls, who had taken more bread than they could eat, to try to finish it so that they wouldn’t be wasting food. They couldn’t finish it, but instead of being scolded, they were gently urged to take less the next time.
In France, schoolchildren are served guinea fowl instead of chicken nuggets.
We poked through the kitchens, pantries, and walk-ins, and saw that everything was amazingly clean; the different walk-ins dedicated to dairy, meat, and fresh fruits and vegetables were all set at the appropriate temperatures. Although European Union rules say that purchases can’t favor locale, we did see quite a few locally grown foods. And school cooks don’t have to order the cheapest foods, so quality clearly comes first.
Who gets to have these meals? All the kids, regardless of their parents’ incomes. They cost about three times as much as our school lunches do, a cost that is shared among the school and local government bodies, such as the mayor’s office. As for those vending machines that we have such a hard time getting rid of, they were banned in France three years ago. Banned.
What impressed me most of all about the French school lunch was not just the deliciousness of the food, but that everything about it — the brightly decorated lunchrooms, the gorgeous kitchens, the lunch moms, the chefs — sent such a deep message of caring. To my ears it fairly screamed, “We care about and love our children. They are us, after all, and we want them to eat well and be nourished.”
Unfortunately, that is about the last message American school lunch sends to our children. Instead, we’re saying, “We have to feed you something; it’s gotta be cheap, and we don’t really care about it or you.” This doesn’t mean that those who put the meals out feel that way, but they are mostly given nothing to work with, be it pots and pans or the knowledge about how to do things, like ripen fruit so that it tastes good when it’s offered.
But there are good people chipping away at our school-lunch problem to offer a better solution and a more caring message. There are schools that enjoy a farmers’-market salad bar, and schools that have big school gardens. There are movements in New Mexico, Oregon, and other states to put local food on the table, especially fruits and vegetables. There are programs, like Cooking with Kids in Santa Fe, in which cooking classes are tied into the class curriculum; in turn, the learned dishes are added to the lunch menu to build more diversity. And there is the amazing Ann Cooper, who is gradually making lunch in all the Berkeley, California, schools better in every way. Yes, there are areas where hope prevails.
If you know some examples of success in the uphill climb to a better American school lunch, let me know here in the comments section. I hope — and bet — we’ll see hundreds of great things happening in the year ahead!
Deborah Madison is the author of numerous award-winning cookbooks, including Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone. She lives in New Mexico.
http://www.culinate.com/hunk/18718
YUMMY what the FRENCH KIDS eat for school lunch -- TWO HOUR LUNCH .
no wonder they ARE smart.
http://www.culinate.com/hunk/29548
French Lunch
1)Iceberg lettuce with radishes and vinaigrette
Grilled fish with lemon
Stewed carrots
Emmental cheese
Apple tart
American LunchZweigel's™ hot dog on a roll with tater tots
2)White cabbage salad [remoulade]
Sauted chicken with mustard
Shell pasta
coulommiers [soft cheese]
Apple compote
America Tyson™ chicken fingers with rice and gravy
3)liver paté and a cornichon
hamburger
peas and carrots
mimolette [Edam-like cheese]
fruit
American Double cheeseburger with Fritos™ chips
4)Cucumber salad with herbs
Spiced sausage
Lentils
Saint nectaire [cheese]
floating island [meringue served on custard]
American Mozzarella stixs [sic] with tomato sauce and garlic pasta noodles
5)potato salad
filet of fish with creamed celery
sauteed lima beans
yogurt
fruit
American Stuffed crust cheese and pepperoni pizza
the French Lunches are NUmbered .
apparently that is a typical 5-day school lunch menu comparison.
NO WONDER the French Kids seem SMARTER. a LOT smarter....
It is well-known fact that schools and prisons (and foreign aid) have been allowed to become the dumping grounds for the offal created by the failed US agricultural price support programs. Excess egg powder, milk powder, cheddar cheese, potato powder, corn syrup, and hamburger slurry, are warehoused throughout the country. This so-called food is mostly produced with foreign oil and without the same legal protections provided by USDA and FDA to paying US food consumers. This offal food is never 'organically' produced (i.e. it contains oil-based pesticides and fertilizers) and has no labeling to indicate if it is a genetically modified organism (GMO), banned in Asian and European foods. Meat inspections (for mad-cow decease, etc.) are virtually non-existent in the US. That is what US parents allow schools to feed our kids. Thanks to the 2009 enactment of Country of Origin law (COOL) we are now able to identify the source country where our food is produced; if its origin is USA don't eat it (unless you know the local organic farmer who produced it).