Undercover Blogger Eats School Lunch Every Day for A Year

October 10th, 2011 - Jill Ettinger

Fed up with Lunch

After a year of anonymously documenting her daily consumption of school lunches in a blog, Chicago public school speech pathologist Sarah Wu, 34, has revealed her identity and a new book, Fed Up With Lunch.

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Whole Foods Market Shoppers Donate More Than $1.4 Million for Salad Bars in U.S. Schools

October 24th, 2010 - Barbara Feiner

Salad

In August, I told you about the Salad Bar Project—a program that allows Whole Foods Market customers to donate money for school salad bars.

I’m happy to report that 7 weeks of fundraising have brought in $1.4 million, which will fund 570 salad bars in U.S. schools.

“The overwhelming support our shoppers have shown for the Salad Bar Project is heartwarming—just plain amazing,” says Whole Foods co-CEO Walter Robb. “We nearly doubled the original fundraising goal, so it’s clear our customers share our passion for supporting more nutritious offerings in school lunchrooms across the country.”

Read More:Whole Foods Market Shoppers Donate More Than $1.4 Million for Salad Bars in U.S. Schools

Can Salad Bar Project Save School Lunch Programs?

August 17th, 2010 - Barbara Feiner

Salad Bar

Whole Foods Market has teamed with “Renegade Lunch Lady” Chef Ann Cooper for the Salad Bar Project, designed to bring fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains and healthy proteins to school cafeterias.

“We see partnering with our shoppers to raise funds for salad bars in local schools as an immediate way for us to come together and make an impact on our children’s health in the communities we serve,” says Whole Foods Co-CEO Walter Robb. “Our goal is to provide a salad bar in a local school in each of the communities we serve with our 300 stores.”

Now through Sept. 29, you can donate to the project at a Whole Foods checkout line or make an online donation. Each salad bar will cost approximately $2,500.

Any public elementary, middle or high school within 50 miles of a Whole Foods Market is eligible to apply through a grant process, which will be administered by Chef Cooper’s Food, Family, Farming Foundation. Grant applications will be accepted between Sept. 1 and Nov. 1.

“I know we can make thousands of salad bars a reality for schools everywhere,” Cooper says. “Since adding a healthy salad bar to school lunch options is the No. 1 thing parents and advocates can do to help improve school food, this is a win-win for schools and their students.”

“Making small changes—like replacing French fries with fresh fruits, steamed or raw vegetables and whole grains—can make a big difference,” Robb adds. “A fresh, healthy salad bar with an array of colorful choices empowers children to make smart food choices.”

More than 31 million children eat a federally funded school lunch each day through the National School Lunch Program. On average, each lunch is budgeted at 90 cents, which means schools rely on mostly frozen, highly processed, packaged foods.

And with no national standardized limits on sugar, artificial colors, flavors or preservatives, it’s common to find hamburgers, chicken nuggets, French fries, chocolate milk and corn dogs on typical school lunch menus. And we wonder why America’s kids are struggling with their weight…

Photo: Ted Major

Read More:Can Salad Bar Project Save School Lunch Programs?

Bravo’s Top Chef Tom Colicchio Supports Better School Lunch

July 7th, 2010 - Scott Shaffer

Tom Colicchio

Tom Colicchio, the head judge of Bravo’s popular Top Chef show, came out in support of the Child Nutrition Act currently in a House committee. Colicchio is the son of a lunch lady himself, and he said that he’s never had any trouble getting kids to eat healthy food—it just has to taste good.

Colicchio isn’t alone in calling for school lunch reform. Rachael Ray went to DC to lobby lawmakers on this issue. Brit Jamie Oliver has made it his primary objective over the last few years to try to change how America thinks about school lunch. Michelle Obama has been battling child obesity ever since she moved into the White House. Revered chef Alice Waters has done a lot to make school lunches tastier and more nutritious.

There’s a lot at stake here. Children who are fed junk don’t perform well in the classroom, and they develop bad eating habits that last long after graduation. These bad eating habits lead to obesity, diabetes, and heart disease, and cost billions. If we want healthy, educated citizens, we need to feed our kids as we would want to be fed.

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What You Need to Know about the Farm Bill

June 14th, 2010 - Administrator

by Maria Rodale

Before your eyes completely glaze over and you skip over this little article to read something more fun, consider this: We only have one chance every five years to make significant changes to how we farm, how we feed our kids at school, how we protect our wildlife, how we fuel our cars and our homes and, finally, how we help those in need eat better.

Yes, the farm bill is not just about farming. It’s also the funder of school lunch programs, wildlife conservation, and food stamps (known as SNAP, for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program).

While we write blog posts and comment on Facebook pages, the agricultural chemical industry, the processed-foods industry, the oil industry, and lots of other industries are spending billions of dollars (which they made from our purchases, mind you) trying to prevent change that will make us all healthier, and lobbying to preserve their stranglehold on the government regulations (or non-regulations, if you prefer) that enable them to continue their toxic domination and contamination of our lives.

I’m not going to list all the reasons why we need to pay attention to the farm bill—for that you can read my book, Organic Manifesto: How Organic Farming Can Feed the World, Heal the Planet, and Keep Us Safe. But I am going to ask you to start paying more attention. Because you have something that those billion-dollar companies don’t—a powerful voice, that when united with other powerful voices, can harmonize together to create the most powerful change of all. That’s democracy.

But in order to make democratic change, we need to start using our voices and paying attention NOW. The next farm bill will be approved in 2012. That’s two years from now. But two years in democracy time are like two days in cyber time. Time is running out.

Here are a few websites where you can use your voice, get involved, and start making changes now that will result in a better future for at least the next five years!

Visit Maria Rodale’s home page.

Read More:What You Need to Know about the Farm Bill

Michelle Obama’s “Chefs Move to Schools” Program

May 29th, 2010 - Scott Shaffer

The White House has a plan to get better food to students! Man oh man, it would’ve been nice if Bush or Clinton had thought of this back when I was in school.

The First Lady announced a new program that should help get healthier and tastier food in public schools. Around the country, chefs will be given the opportunity to “adopt” local schools and help renovate their menus. I’m foreseeing dumpsters full of fried chicken patties and italian dunkers.

This is what the White House has to say about the program:

“Chefs Move to Schools” will pair chefs with schools in their communities to bring fun to fruits and vegetables, and teach kids about food, nutrition and cooking in an engaging way. And by working with school food service employees, administrators and teachers – chefs can help deliver these messages from the cafeteria to the classroom.

I’ve worked in a summer camp kitchen, and I know how the processed, fried, and unhealthy food can be tempting from the cook’s point of view, just because it’s so easy to make. That’s why it’s so smart to bring in trained chefs to share their skills and knowledge with students. I’m cautiously optimistic. There are a lot of bad habits that kids gain in school—this program won’t affect the fact that there are tons of junk food vending machines in our schools—but this seems like a step in the right direction.

Read More:Michelle Obama’s “Chefs Move to Schools” Program

Pizza Fusion Announces Organic School Food Program

May 24th, 2010 - Gerald "Gerry" Pugliese

School food and “wow, that tasted great” don’t exactly go together. Remember the Salisbury “steak” and mash potatoes ala ice cream scoop? Yeah, fail.

Even pizza Fridays were horrendous, with those defrosted squares of mutant pizza. I’m Italian, so they still haunt my dreams.

But Pizza Fusion, an organic and “earth friendly” pizza franchise with 15 locations nation wide, has just launched School Organic Pizza Fridays.

Pizza Fusion got the idea after recent reports linking pesticides – widely used in non-organic food – to developmental problems in children, such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD.

Basically they want to provide kids with healthier food. Oh come on! You mean churros and dried out hamburgers under heat lamps aren’t good for you – no!

Organic and healthy tend to go hand-in-hand. Odds are if you are eating organic foods, you’re not eating poorly. Last time I checked McDonald’s hasn’t rolled out the McTreeHugger yet.

Pizza Fusions says they offer a 75% organic menu – which includes salads, sandwiches, desserts, and wine and beer – but they’re most famous for their pizza.

So if you want your school to jump on the Pizza Fusion organic bandwagon, just email info@pizzafusion.com.

Image credit: Pizza Fusion

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Jamie Oliver’s Season Finale: The “Revolution” Verdict

April 23rd, 2010 - Barbara Feiner

Convincing an entire town to change its eating habits may be a herculean feat, but British chef Jamie Oliver never wanted to be perceived as a nutritional superhero.

“I’m not trying to pretend I’m bloody Superman or something like that because it’s just not the case,” says Oliver, whose Food Revolution finale airs tonight (9 p.m. ET/PT on ABC). “But I have a very strange job. I have this wonderful opportunity—a lifetime opportunity to help a country that I care about.” 

As a father of three, Oliver has an emotional connection to the show. 

“Kids are so open-minded, and they’re so up for the challenge of trying things,” he says. “Often, it’s the parents that ruin the kids’ opportunities. Everyone always blames the kids, but it’s really not the kids; it’s the adults.” 

Food manufacturers, school districts and parents are in positions of power, Oliver says, and they’ve made “lots of bad decisions” over the last three generations. In both the United States and Britain, obesity rates have produced “the first generation of kids expected not to outlive their parents,” he notes. 

“It’s that kind of stuff that gets me upset and always will,” he says. 

The most important step in correcting poor dietary habits is learning how to cook, Oliver maintains. 

“If you know how to cook four, five or 10 simple dishes that are affordable and nutritious, then you’ve got choices,” he says. “And if you can’t cook, you haven’t got choices.”

Tonight on “Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution” 

Oliver’s efforts have borne fruit, but now what? 

 In the final episode, everything he has accomplished unravels when he leaves Huntington, WV. School food personnel are planning to reintroduce processed food to use up the mountain of surplus foods previously ordered. Children’s parents are also pulling them out of Oliver’s lunch program, and most of the school cooks remain untrained and unwilling to learn. 

With the media hounding him at every step and a city that’s revolting against his message, Oliver returns to pull off his most powerful demonstration yet. Is he too late? 

Photo: Holly Farrell/ABC

Read More:Jamie Oliver’s Season Finale: The “Revolution” Verdict

Will “Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution” Succeed?

April 16th, 2010 - Barbara Feiner

When the community of Huntington, WV, watched the season premiere of Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution, they had mixed feelings about how the British chef would interact with their friends and neighbors. 

As resident Amy Gannon, a registered dietitian, told the town’s Herald-Dispatch newspaper: “Basically, Jamie Oliver has picked up on the obesity epidemic. I’m sure that he has good intentions for Huntington, but I know this is a reality show. He will show people that are resistant to change. I believe the idea is for Jamie to ride in on his white horse and save us all from ourselves.” 

For Oliver, Huntington is representative of many U.S. and British towns, where radical shifts have occurred in the food industry. 

“[We’ve] gone from an army of mom-and-pop restaurants and real signature dishes of [these areas] to largely only fast-food chains,” he says. And West Virginia, he notes, “has more small farms than any other state in America,” yet produce seems limited. 

Oliver, who has focused primarily on school nutrition, remains passionate about revamping cafeteria menus. 

“You put those beautiful little kids in school 180 days of the year, from [ages] 4 to 18, and nearly every choice is still a version of junk food,” he says. 

Ultimately, it will be up to Huntington’s leaders to decide whether they want to implement Oliver’s changes. 

“You’ll see, as the show unravels, it’s not a show that ends with a happy ending, but more of a passing over of the baton,” he says. 

“It’s for them to make it,” he adds. “It was always about finding local ambassadors of change and really embedding high hopes for everyone.”

Tonight on “Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution” (9 p.m. ET/PT, ABC) 

In Episode 5 of 6, Oliver places the burden of change squarely on the shoulders of Huntington High School students by asking them to choose between a lunch menu of processed junk food or fresh fare—and he’s shocked by their response. 

His faith is shaken when he is forced to rely on the testimony of his biggest adversary, elementary school head cook Alice Gue, to help convince local hospital administrators to fund training for school cooks and provide sustainable resources to roll out the food revolution in Huntington. 

Photo: Holly Farrell/ABC

Read More:Will “Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution” Succeed?

School Lunch Guidelines: Jamie Oliver’s Take

April 9th, 2010 - Barbara Feiner

When asked about the recently proposed federal guidelines for foods sold at U.S. schools, British celebrity chef and Food Revolution host Jamie Oliver says they’re “definitely a step in the right direction.” 

He is, however, concerned about how schools will fiscally implement any final rules. 

“It’s great that we’ve got new standards being put forward,” he says. “However, if the right amount of funds aren’t delivered in conjunction with the standards, then [schools] won’t be able to implement the standards.” 

Oliver believes revamping school food programs will succeed or fail based on “the training and empowerment and love given to school cooks.” Proper training, he says, will increase their motivation to help combat America’s childhood obesity epidemic. 

School cooks will “understand it, they’ll be inspired, they’ll feel important,” he says. 

“We’re not even anywhere near what needs to be put forward,” Oliver adds. “[Obesity] is killing children—your children. It’s changing the face of health and the health of Americans. And I think that we need to put into context the amount of money that needs to fix 30 and 40 years of, really, lack of investment—let’s be frank. 

“I know money is everything,” he continues, “but let’s remember how much is being spent on war every month, to put it in perspective.” 

Tonight on “Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution” (9 p.m. ET/PT, ABC) 

In Episode 4 of 6, Oliver realizes the importance of moving his food revolution beyond the schools to involve the entire community of Huntington, West Virginia. He organizes a 1,000-person educational cook-a-thon, with participants ranging from steelworkers and firemen to parents and government officials. 

Photo: Holly Farrell/ABC

Read More:School Lunch Guidelines: Jamie Oliver’s Take

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