Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you start down this path, then you'll end up with a lot of backlash. Schools in Canada are policing the food that people bring from home!!
https://www.cbc.ca/parents/learning/view/lunch-shaming-is-real-and-it-happened-to-my-daughter?fbclid=IwAR23IUqi1x7Sa3Y5KvAUHNT7jKOlOeIs953O_-ACt03o8JwbaRehAVdH96A
The examples in that article are pretty bad and the teachers need to be more flexible. But my previous job was at a school and this one (yes, overweight) child would have a big thermos of mac n cheese every single day. So there should be some basic guidelines.
Anonymous wrote:If you start down this path, then you'll end up with a lot of backlash. Schools in Canada are policing the food that people bring from home!!
https://www.cbc.ca/parents/learning/view/lunch-shaming-is-real-and-it-happened-to-my-daughter?fbclid=IwAR23IUqi1x7Sa3Y5KvAUHNT7jKOlOeIs953O_-ACt03o8JwbaRehAVdH96A
Anonymous wrote:I think the issue is that many American kids are brought up thinking they can only eat kid food. And many poor people are only used to junk food. It’s hard to change palates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We already had a national dialogue--remember Michelle Obama? Let's Move? Big changes in the school lunch program thwarted by the food industry, so badly that pizza is now considered a vegetable?
Plus kids wouldn't eat the food. But to be fair, it sounded like it was not very appealing. Raw vegetables, salads, bland steamed vegetables. Our family eats a ton of vegetables but we cook them in interesting recipes (usually Greek).
Lunch lady dorris isn’t cooking briam for 400 kids
Other countries manage to provide good meals in their schools. France, Greece, etc
Other countries manage universal healthcare, massive amounts of employee rights, free secondary education... We’re the outlier on all of those, there’s no reason to think school lunch would be different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We already had a national dialogue--remember Michelle Obama? Let's Move? Big changes in the school lunch program thwarted by the food industry, so badly that pizza is now considered a vegetable?
Plus kids wouldn't eat the food. But to be fair, it sounded like it was not very appealing. Raw vegetables, salads, bland steamed vegetables. Our family eats a ton of vegetables but we cook them in interesting recipes (usually Greek).
Like look at the sample menu you can open here: https://www.fns.usda.gov/pressrelease/002312
I wouldn't want to eat this. Why is there ranch dressing almost every day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We already had a national dialogue--remember Michelle Obama? Let's Move? Big changes in the school lunch program thwarted by the food industry, so badly that pizza is now considered a vegetable?
Plus kids wouldn't eat the food. But to be fair, it sounded like it was not very appealing. Raw vegetables, salads, bland steamed vegetables. Our family eats a ton of vegetables but we cook them in interesting recipes (usually Greek).
Lunch lady dorris isn’t cooking briam for 400 kids
Other countries manage to provide good meals in their schools. France, Greece, etc
Anonymous wrote:I wish there were more “real food” and less processed food. I just don’t see that happening easily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We already had a national dialogue--remember Michelle Obama? Let's Move? Big changes in the school lunch program thwarted by the food industry, so badly that pizza is now considered a vegetable?
Plus kids wouldn't eat the food. But to be fair, it sounded like it was not very appealing. Raw vegetables, salads, bland steamed vegetables. Our family eats a ton of vegetables but we cook them in interesting recipes (usually Greek).
Lunch lady dorris isn’t cooking briam for 400 kids