Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pies are made with pork lard that some teachers won’t eat. They often contain poisons like soy or vegetable oils also. Please don’t.
LOL. You sound crazy. What do you actually eat?
Regardless, if you don’t like pie, don’t eat it. Plenty of us DO like pie and will happily eat it.
There are a lot of teachers who don’t eat pork. You’d be surprised how many of these pies will get regifted. Most have terrible ingredients, too, as I said before
Then simply make a Graham cracker crust.
Wrong.
They can let teachers select a pie or not.
No need to stop all the fun because some teacher might have a food allergy. A well organized event will include some dairy free/gluten free options.
Many don’t eat gluten either. The point is that food is a bad idea in general.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pies are made with pork lard that some teachers won’t eat. They often contain poisons like soy or vegetable oils also. Please don’t.
LOL. You sound crazy. What do you actually eat?
Regardless, if you don’t like pie, don’t eat it. Plenty of us DO like pie and will happily eat it.
There are a lot of teachers who don’t eat pork. You’d be surprised how many of these pies will get regifted. Most have terrible ingredients, too, as I said before
Then simply make a Graham cracker crust.
Anonymous wrote:I take from the full conversation that
* teachers would appreciate being appreciated through this type of gift.
* many, many teachers would greatly appreciate the pie, itself. Particularly if there is are a variety of choices, including some store-bought and the gift mechanism allows them to choose their pie.
* it might be a good idea to have a few different but similar treats for those who really wouldn't like pie. Pumpkin bread or challah and similar from a nice bakery comes to mind as an alternative.
* since this is a new initiative for the school, having these different options would enable them to better calibrate for next year-- if the bread goes faster than the pie then they'll revise next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pies are made with pork lard that some teachers won’t eat. They often contain poisons like soy or vegetable oils also. Please don’t.
LOL. You sound crazy. What do you actually eat?
Regardless, if you don’t like pie, don’t eat it. Plenty of us DO like pie and will happily eat it.
There are a lot of teachers who don’t eat pork. You’d be surprised how many of these pies will get regifted. Most have terrible ingredients, too, as I said before
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pies are made with pork lard that some teachers won’t eat. They often contain poisons like soy or vegetable oils also. Please don’t.
LOL. You sound crazy. What do you actually eat?
Regardless, if you don’t like pie, don’t eat it. Plenty of us DO like pie and will happily eat it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pies are made with pork lard that some teachers won’t eat. They often contain poisons like soy or vegetable oils also. Please don’t.
LOL. You sound crazy. What do you actually eat?
Regardless, if you don’t like pie, don’t eat it. Plenty of us DO like pie and will happily eat it.
What is wrong with you? Are you a teacher or a parent? Either way you need to take the equity training we all are required to take to understand cultural dietary restrictions and allergies.
Certain religions do not eat any pork products. Some vegetarians and vegans do not eat pie due to lard being the crust.
I really hope you were being sarcastic.
Then those people should not eat pies. That doesn’t mean we have to quit offering pies to everyone.
Everyone has dietary preferences. Can’t cater to everyone.
I don’t eat cilantro. If someone makes a cilantro pie, I won’t eat it. But I don’t expect people to never make them. That would be unreasonable.
Again, you sound crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pies are made with pork lard that some teachers won’t eat. They often contain poisons like soy or vegetable oils also. Please don’t.
LOL. You sound crazy. What do you actually eat?
Regardless, if you don’t like pie, don’t eat it. Plenty of us DO like pie and will happily eat it.
What is wrong with you? Are you a teacher or a parent? Either way you need to take the equity training we all are required to take to understand cultural dietary restrictions and allergies.
Certain religions do not eat any pork products. Some vegetarians and vegans do not eat pie due to lard being the crust.
I really hope you were being sarcastic.
Then those people should not eat pies. That doesn’t mean we have to quit offering pies to everyone.
Everyone has dietary preferences. Can’t cater to everyone.
I don’t eat cilantro. If someone makes a cilantro pie, I won’t eat it. But I don’t expect people to never make them. That would be unreasonable.
Again, you sound crazy.
Thread is asking if teachers would want pie. People are posting reasons they may not, some that may not instantly come to mind (I'd never considered the religion angle).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pies are made with pork lard that some teachers won’t eat. They often contain poisons like soy or vegetable oils also. Please don’t.
LOL. You sound crazy. What do you actually eat?
Regardless, if you don’t like pie, don’t eat it. Plenty of us DO like pie and will happily eat it.
What is wrong with you? Are you a teacher or a parent? Either way you need to take the equity training we all are required to take to understand cultural dietary restrictions and allergies.
Certain religions do not eat any pork products. Some vegetarians and vegans do not eat pie due to lard being the crust.
I really hope you were being sarcastic.
Then those people should not eat pies. That doesn’t mean we have to quit offering pies to everyone.
Everyone has dietary preferences. Can’t cater to everyone.
I don’t eat cilantro. If someone makes a cilantro pie, I won’t eat it. But I don’t expect people to never make them. That would be unreasonable.
Again, you sound crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pies are made with pork lard that some teachers won’t eat. They often contain poisons like soy or vegetable oils also. Please don’t.
LOL. You sound crazy. What do you actually eat?
Regardless, if you don’t like pie, don’t eat it. Plenty of us DO like pie and will happily eat it.
What is wrong with you? Are you a teacher or a parent? Either way you need to take the equity training we all are required to take to understand cultural dietary restrictions and allergies.
Certain religions do not eat any pork products. Some vegetarians and vegans do not eat pie due to lard being the crust.
I really hope you were being sarcastic.
Then those people should not eat pies. That doesn’t mean we have to quit offering pies to everyone.
Everyone has dietary preferences. Can’t cater to everyone.
I don’t eat cilantro. If someone makes a cilantro pie, I won’t eat it. But I don’t expect people to never make them. That would be unreasonable.
Again, you sound crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people will eat a store bought pie. Only a few will eat a homemade one if they know who made it. Many homemade goodies go in the trash when teachers get home.
Signed,
A Teacher 🍎
That’s crazy.
Thoughtless, wasteful, crazy.
Homemade is better than store bought. Only a fancy bakery tops homemade.
If you are too paranoid to eat homemade baked goods you need therapy. Truly.
Well I’m a teacher and I will attest that most homemade goodies are not eaten. I know. It stinks! But we don’t need therapy, we just don’t want to become ill. There is no possible way to know everyone’s dietary needs and bringing in unknown foods will result in them being discarded as a safety precaution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pies are made with pork lard that some teachers won’t eat. They often contain poisons like soy or vegetable oils also. Please don’t.
LOL. You sound crazy. What do you actually eat?
Regardless, if you don’t like pie, don’t eat it. Plenty of us DO like pie and will happily eat it.
What is wrong with you? Are you a teacher or a parent? Either way you need to take the equity training we all are required to take to understand cultural dietary restrictions and allergies.
Certain religions do not eat any pork products. Some vegetarians and vegans do not eat pie due to lard being the crust.
I really hope you were being sarcastic.