I think drawing attention to it is one of the only ways you're going to show parents that those lobbies do have such a strong hold on the nutrition programs, though.
But so far, there has been not a word mentioned about the lobbies. The USDA regulations are treated as some silly rules that he's trying to get around, not as federal rules that the school has to follow or else they don't get food at all.
And I don't get that he's shaming anyone. Not intentionally. He seems to genuinely care about health.
I can't see telling a parent "You are killing your child!" as anything other than shaming. Same for looking at a family's meal and telling them, "This is disgusting."
On the skim milk thing, the school's explanation was that the whole, 2%, and chocolate milk were required, and thus subsidized. Skim milk was not required, and thus they had to pay full price for it.
He seems to genuinely care about health.
Hee- Jamie Oliver's a Concern Troll!
FitDay is good for tracking food against activity level, plus giving a breakdown of how much fiber, etc.
I've been using the MyPlate function at LiveStrong for a while now, but I've been using one of the preset activity levels and possibly was doing myself a disservice. I walk 3-4 miles during the course of an average work day, more if I run errands, which means carrying bags and going up and down a ton of stairs, and that's all before I hit the gym or the weights or the yoga mat.
I made JZ a totally from scratch and tasty stir fry tonight that met her vegan-for-lent requirements: minced onions and garlic in the oil, spinach, tomatoes, mushrooms, green onions, and tofu. I added a sauce made of soy sauce, crystalized ginger (one piece finely chopped), mustard and hot sauce.
(Then I made a TJ's cheese pizza for the rest of us. It was organic! Okay, I cheated there.)
Then we ate strawberries which are hitting the market in abundance all of a sudden and are gorgeous deep red and flavorful and cheap.
Y'know, I don't know what other baggage Oliver carries, but honestly? If that food shown was what that family ate regularly? It's not about their weight or size. It's about poor nutrition. Ditto the school lunches.
We always had skim milk. 1980-1993.
I added a sauce made of soy sauce, crystalized ginger (one piece finely chopped), mustard and hot sauce.
Ooh, that sounds awesome. I'll remember it for when CSA season comes around (when we eat lots of stirfries!)
It was pretty horrifying to me that a classroom full of kindergarteners couldn't name common fruits and vegetables, though.
I am now regretting my Friday CSA pickup, given how many Fridays I will be out of town. Woes!
It was pretty horrifying to me that a classroom full of kindergarteners couldn't name common fruits and vegetables, though.
Well, the potatoes and tomatoes were pretty bad, but I'm not sure how many kids that age could identify beets. And we didn't see them try apples or bananas or carrots or other things kids more commonly eat.
Ooh, that sounds awesome. I'll remember it for when CSA season comes around (when we eat lots of stirfries!)
It was really good! I'd been looking at that jar of crystalized ginger for a while thinking, "But I don't really want ginger snaps" when it occurred to me that I could use it in a stir fry sauce. I just took one chunk of ginger and chopped it up, though again it was just enough sauce for JZ's meal.
Oh yeah, there was a little honey in there too.
eta:
Scrappy, insent.