LisaR
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- Joined
- Sep 26, 2000
- Messages
- 9,935
Just finished watching episode 1 and most of 2 on my computer. I don't see the ladies as being as rude as others have written about but they are being defensive and trying to do their jobs according to the rules that they are required to follow. I also feel some of this is staged. If the ladies were all agreeable on day one and did not put up resistance then Jaime would not have show!!
They did seem surprised about "real" chicken more than I thought they would be.
I do agree that he should wear gloves in their kitchen but I also feel they should wear hairnets instead of the visors!!
We rotate our menus.
August,Sept. Oct./// Nov, Dec.,Jan.,Feb/// Mar.,April,May
During our "winter" menu we have "real" chicken which we bake. It does take time to prepare and we have to spend 2 days getting it ready to cook while still having time to cook other items.
We also have roasted red potatoes paired with "real" turkey roast. Those also are easy to cook but to have the time they have to be cut the day before and soaked in water to prevent them from turning dark.
With our vegetables we have a salad/// tomato& lettuce///mini carrots///slaw at least 2 times a week.
Other vegetables we can use canned or frozen. I prefer to use the fresh-frozen because they look much better and are not as mushy.
With fruits I try to have fresh fruit: oranges (or tangerines) and apples at least twice a week. Sometimes this will have to vary towards the end of the school year to use up any canned fruits we have in our stock that we have received from USDA.
There are those of us doing things as right as we can. When I choose my fruit for the day I try to make the plate as colorful as possible. Also I switched to brown rice totally this year. Last year we would mix white and brown to get the kids use to it and this year they have not even realized that white rice is gone.
A couple of years ago we had two versions of cereal...one regular...one less sugar. I made sure I always chose the ones with less sugar and other kitchens kept on ordering the ones with more sugar. I kept telling them that the kids do not miss the extra sugar. I am also the only kitchen in our town thay does NOT allow choc. milk for breakfast. They just do not need it. Also choc is the only flavored milk I have. Last year when we were trying to cut some items from our order guide I was actually able to finally convince the others to stop ordering the higher sugar cereals!! MY own small victory!! LOL!!
Mum4jenn, you are being SOOOO defensive. This thread isn't about YOU or YOUR school. It is great to hear that your school is trying so hard. That is truly fantastic. However, not all schools are putting any effort into nutrition. The school in Huntington has a long way to go. Do you honestly not see the differences between your school and theirs? You are like the teacher that runs a great classroom and therefore defends every classroom in America. The reality is, our school systems are in trouble both academically and nutritionally. A few are doing it right but many more are failing. If this show brings awareness, generates talks and inspires action by a handful of other schools, it will be well worth it.
All of the schools in our district have made changes (salad bar is offered daily and vending machines removed) but they rotate the same five crappy meals every week (corn dogs, hot dogs, nuggets, pizza, burgers & fries). Most kids are going to pick crap if it is available. My DD friend in high school buys Gatorade and chips 5 days a week. Nothing else. She said the other food tastes horrible and even if it was good, there isn't enough time to stand in line and eat. She can grab her quick junk and still have enough time to socialize for a few minutes and eat the rest on the way to class. I would strangle my kids if that is what they had to eat for lunch everyday.