Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rice and beans, with cheese and the occasional salad vegetable would be better than the garbage they feed these kids at school.
No kid will eat that every day. I would not eat that every day. Yuck. It sounds gross and boring.
Anonymous wrote:The problem with the school food during the Michelle Obama push, was that it was bland, blanched and nasty.
The only lesson it gave to food was that "healthy" food was disgusting.
Plus the portions were so small and not appropriate for growing kids. Even at the high school grades, the portions were akin to what one would feed a picky 3 year old or a dieting middle aged mom.
That "healthy" lunch program was so poorly executed, it was laughable. I am saying this as a parent who had kids in a total of 7 different school in 4 different states hitting both coasts, the south and the midwest.

Anonymous wrote: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).
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?
Because kids eat veggies when they have ranch to dip them in. That one makes sense.
Apparently not, since there was a ton of food waste. I don't know any kids (and not many adults) who actively want to eat raw broccoli with or without ranch. It would be better to cook them with herbs and spices. Making a healthy vegetable dish that tastes good isn't that hard.
Why does everyone on this board think that kids don't want to eat vegetables? I think half of the problems are caused by parents who present vegetables as this awful thinks that kids just have to hold their nose and eat. I grew up eating tons of vegetables, my kids eat tons of vegetables. I think it's so weird that other kids don't or their parents made them think veggies taste bad!! My kid eats the veggies and dip first!
Anonymous wrote:Rice and beans, with cheese and the occasional salad vegetable would be better than the garbage they feed these kids at school.
Anonymous wrote:Bottom line: If we truly cared about equity, we wouldn't be feeding processed food to kids who have no other options. America can do better.
12:31 I thought I acknowledged in my original post that any food is better than no food. If I didn't, I absolutely meant to.
Another poster wrote "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." I don't want to argue whether or not this is true, but palates and eating habits are never going to change if bad habits are reinforced.
Anonymous wrote:Now that school lunch/breakfast are available to anyone, is there any chance for a national dialogue on improving the nutrition of school feeding programs? I'm completely baffled by parents posting on Facebook how nutritious the food is. It is wonderful the meals include milk and fresh fruit and some vegetables, but the sugar cereal and prepackaged muffins leave me baffled. How is that nutritious? Obviously some food is better than no food if it is a choice between sugar packed "food" and going hungry, but can't we do better as a society, especially for kids who aren't getting fed at home?
Anonymous wrote:Bottom line: If we truly cared about equity, we wouldn't be feeding processed food to kids who have no other options. America can do better.
12:31 I thought I acknowledged in my original post that any food is better than no food. If I didn't, I absolutely meant to.
Another poster wrote "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." I don't want to argue whether or not this is true, but palates and eating habits are never going to change if bad habits are reinforced.
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).
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?
Because kids eat veggies when they have ranch to dip them in. That one makes sense.
Apparently not, since there was a ton of food waste. I don't know any kids (and not many adults) who actively want to eat raw broccoli with or without ranch. It would be better to cook them with herbs and spices. Making a healthy vegetable dish that tastes good isn't that hard.
Anonymous wrote: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.
I volunteered in my kid’s class a lot last year and the stuff people brought for snacks, provided by parents, often wasn’t healthy. Muffins, fruit cups, jello,etc. even the “healthy” stuff was often sweet and laced with sugar, which would have them bouncing off the walls. That being said: I get it. You want your kid to eat, and sometimes you have to give in to the madness. My youngest went through a faze where she would only eat chicken nuggets, so we would either have to let her starve or feed her what she wanted.