Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last week I packed my kid chipotle beef with whole grain rice, cucumber slices, and grape tomatoes. Oh no, wait, that was actually the MCPS school lunch on Tuesday September 10.
Haters gonna hate.
I'd love that recipe! I'm sure it's really delicious. And that's great that your kid has a nice, long lunch break to enjoy such a healthy meal. I'm sure he had time to finish the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:Last week I packed my kid chipotle beef with whole grain rice, cucumber slices, and grape tomatoes. Oh no, wait, that was actually the MCPS school lunch on Tuesday September 10.
Haters gonna hate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I complained to DD's public elem school about the lunch quality and allotted time, I was pretty much looked at like I was strange for even bringing that up. The feedback I received from her teacher was, "I know. I know. The kids will learn to eat fast. They have to." The response I got back from the principal was, "Most parents want to talk about the academics or curriculum." I simply said that I felt that the quality of the lunch food and allotted time were just as important because if kids are hungry or do not have the fuel(a.k.a. food) throught a 7 hour day to stay focused, then it would directly impact their performance at school. So, indeed, it does matter. I ended up having to take it to the superintendant, but it really is surprising how many people think that packing and/or providing a healthy and satisfying lunch for our children is not that big a deal Mon-Fri. OH well.....just venting.
I'm glad you are taking up the cause because for me, it's just easier to pack a lunch.
Anonymous wrote:When I complained to DD's public elem school about the lunch quality and allotted time, I was pretty much looked at like I was strange for even bringing that up. The feedback I received from her teacher was, "I know. I know. The kids will learn to eat fast. They have to." The response I got back from the principal was, "Most parents want to talk about the academics or curriculum." I simply said that I felt that the quality of the lunch food and allotted time were just as important because if kids are hungry or do not have the fuel(a.k.a. food) throught a 7 hour day to stay focused, then it would directly impact their performance at school. So, indeed, it does matter. I ended up having to take it to the superintendant, but it really is surprising how many people think that packing and/or providing a healthy and satisfying lunch for our children is not that big a deal Mon-Fri. OH well.....just venting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a single working parent, and DD and I pack her lunch together. The school lunch is vile.
Did your DD attend preschool/daycare? Are school lunches in public school worse than daycare food?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I disagree with the notion that packing your child's lunch is cheaper. Not if you're packing healthy. School lunch is $2.25 or something like that. By the time I pack a yogurt, piece of fruit, some grape tomatoes, and a main of some sort, I've probably spent more than that.
I pack healthy, and it's definitely cheaper -- but I don't pack yogurts. Today's lunch was a quesadilla (with 2 corn tortillas), a hard-boiled egg, carrot sticks, and cherry tomatoes. The cherry tomatoes come from the garden. If I didn't have that, I might have packed a clementine. Corn tortillas are $1.49 per dozen, the cheese is $5.49 per pound, the eggs are $3.50 per dozen, the carrots are $0.89 per pound, and I haven't bought clementines lately but they're usually what, $6.00 per 5 pounds?
Anonymous wrote:
I disagree with the notion that packing your child's lunch is cheaper. Not if you're packing healthy. School lunch is $2.25 or something like that. By the time I pack a yogurt, piece of fruit, some grape tomatoes, and a main of some sort, I've probably spent more than that.