Thursday, July 24, 2014

Let's Get Fat (Food Nutrition In Public and Private Schools)

(Photo courtesy of HealthXWellnes.com)
In these days when we speak of getting fat (not to be confused with P.H.A.T - pretty hot and tempting) it depicts the cluelessness we as parents and guardians are when it comes to what is being feed to our children during lunch inside of the public and private school sectors.  

While we hurry to various fast food joints that boast “how well for the soul” their food is, meanwhile back at the ranch (schools), our children our being feed crap during lunch time. 

Peanut butter sandwiches are pre-packed, along w/leaking crushed milk cartons, non-washed prepackaged, baby carrots anywhere from eight to nine months old, over ripened red apples that have been coated with FDA fruit wax then frozen and thawed prior to serving to the children.  Oh, and please do NOT fail to mention the oranges that are under ripe and sour that ends up as the weapon of choice in a many cafeteria food fights. 
 
 
(Photo courtesy of Ocean985.com)
 
And if that’s not enough, catch this, some of these schools serving such terrible and ghastly foods as previously described are actually equipped with big beautiful kitchens, with enough commercial equipment to feed the community around them balanced and ultra-nutritious meals. But they don’t cook. Incredible to believe!  

Food is purchased and shipped in huge lots then placed inside large freezers, and then they are delivered to the schools as is. Please do not misunderstand that there are some schools across the country that offer fabulous meal time selections, mainly due to the fine culinary teams working year round.  

Here’s something to consider in retrospect: Remember when schools had cafeteria’s and by that I define cafeteria as what we experienced back in the 60’s and 70’s; a place where “food” was being prepared and the aroma of food filled the hallways just as the smell from a chicken joint inhabits the nostrils at a busy intersection. 

I remember the days when our parents made us sack lunches that consisted of a slice of corn bread leftover from the previous night’s dinner, a piece of chicken, some fruit from the tree in the back yard, and we purchased milk during lunch Even if it were peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, they were all made with love and care of my soul. 

Children sit in a classroom every day for about 6 to 7 hours and are instructed to focus and learn. My question is this: How can they focus if they are hunger? Many children do not eat prior to going to school and if so, it’s something menial like cereal that causes a sugar high then crashing some 1 or 2 hours later, if that long. 

The last thing I want us a parents to consider. We will run to health food stores to purchase pills, supplements and drinks for our adult nutrition and head straight to a “fast food” joint to feed our children. What’s wrong w/that picture?  

This is why I am now introducing “#LETSGETFAT” Food Consciousness Program. This program is designed to teach us all how to shop for food and to really know what you are buying.  Also, this program re-emphasizes the dire need for us to make the time to cook complete nutritious meals for our families. Let’s get a dinner time back as an event in the home.  
 
(Photo courtesy of Homecooking.com)
 

#LETSGETFAT is about getting back to the basic ways of buying, cooking and preparing our meals. This is NOT about dieting or exploiting yet another senseless expensive fad. Aren’t we tired of all those diets anyway….really? 

#LETSGETFAT is truly about: Learning to cook simple meals, understanding what are our healthy good fats, enjoying family and putting dinner time back on the table in the home. Join me in…#LETSGETFAT!

1 comment:

  1. Incredible. Growing up in Phoenix, AZ I was a "latch-key kid" (means both parents worked and you came home alone and the house key was penned to your inside shirt) and remember vividly how dad or mom came home to cook! We sat down at the table "every night" and blessed our food, ate, enjoyed it, talked or listened to our parents speak to us or to each other and hey....clean up and goodnight!

    Our schools prepared the "best" stews, tacos, chicken w/mashed potatoes and gravy, sloppy joes....you name it. I was almost a teen before I had ever eaten a slice of pizza. We ate food! Great food!

    I'm so glad that I continued that when I became a mother. Nothing was more pleasing to me than to cook warm meals and have the aroma going throughout the house. As my daughters would enter the house when arriving from school the expressions on their often cold faces (we lived in Idaho at the time) was priceless. Mom had cooked!

    Our families need that more than ever!

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