Anonymous wrote:My kid qualifies for free lunch (and free breakfast actually). I do not eat lunch to afford to buy her food so we can pack her lunches. She is a tiny, wisp of a child and I don't give her lowfat anything, so don't even let her buy the (lowfat) milk at school. The school lunches are just vile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well...I think the worst thing about the new lunches is that although they are "healthy", they taste disgusting according to my kids and the portion sizes are too small, especially for growing boys.
In past years, my kids wanted to buy lunch at least half of the time. This year, they ask maybe once a month, usually during breakfast for lunch day.
Whatever they have done to those lunches to make them fit the anti-fat kid campaign is a huge fail.
Totally agree. IMO, they are TOO "healthy" and don't have enough options that kids actually like. If you actually have lunch with your child, you will be sickened -- not from the food --- which is PLENTIFUL -- but from the amount that is wasted! OMG. The kids throw at least 50% of the food away, and sometimes more. I wish they would go back to making sloppy joes and chicken with noodles and serving REAL french fries or tater tots instead of some "sweet potato rounds" that no one will eat. And what the heck is jicama???? Seriously? Stick with the normal fruits and veggies. Most kids won't eat but a bite anyway. At least make it something they know.
My kids don't even like the pizza! Seriously. School lunches are NOT the cause of obesity, I'm 100% certain of that. Kids are overweight/obese b/c of the volume of food they eat at home (and yes, a lot of it is chips and sodas). I wish the school would stop trying to make my NON-obese kids "healthy" by serving unappealing food. I'm not afraid of a little salt, fat, food coloring or sugar.
Anonymous wrote:Well...I think the worst thing about the new lunches is that although they are "healthy", they taste disgusting according to my kids and the portion sizes are too small, especially for growing boys.
In past years, my kids wanted to buy lunch at least half of the time. This year, they ask maybe once a month, usually during breakfast for lunch day.
Whatever they have done to those lunches to make them fit the anti-fat kid campaign is a huge fail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Are they the outlier (i.e. do most kids buy lunch or is it a good mix of packers and buyers)?
If it really concerns you that much, check how many kids at your school qualify for free and reduced price lunch and you'll have a pretty good idea of whether yours might be an "outlier" or not.
Anonymous wrote: Are they the outlier (i.e. do most kids buy lunch or is it a good mix of packers and buyers)?
Anonymous wrote:My son is starting K next year and I was disappointed to see the lunch menu options. At first blush, it looks great - lots of whole grain and each student must select one veggie or fruit. But then you dig a little deeper and there's lots of high fructose corn syrup, partially hydrogenated vegetable oil and the fruit options include a fruit crisp and juice boxes - not exactly what I would categorize as fruit. (Kind of like calling french fries a vegetable...)
I will probably end up packing his lunch. I had heard so much about how the nutrition in school lunches has improved so was quite disappointed.
Anyone else have the same concerns? Do you just pack your child's lunch? Are they the outlier (i.e. do most kids buy lunch or is it a good mix of packers and buyers)?
Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel its hard to pack a nutritious lunch without being able to heat up your meal. For me, there's not many cold food options that I find overly healthy. I try to balance lunch off with breakfast and dinner. And of course, being active!
My DD has a hot lunch in a thermos daily. A pain for me but it works. First fill the thermos with boiling hot water and let it sit with the top loosely on for 5 minutes. Then add the hot lunch (soup, stew, whole wheat pasta and meatballs, etc)
Anonymous wrote:I feel its hard to pack a nutritious lunch without being able to heat up your meal. For me, there's not many cold food options that I find overly healthy. I try to balance lunch off with breakfast and dinner. And of course, being active!
Anonymous wrote:My kid qualifies for free lunch (and free breakfast actually). I do not eat lunch to afford to buy her food so we can pack her lunches. She is a tiny, wisp of a child and I don't give her lowfat anything, so don't even let her buy the (lowfat) milk at school. The school lunches are just vile.