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Dodger
Tue, May-01-07, 14:07
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/science/4765161.html

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Dominated by doughnuts, pizza and foods-on-a-stick, the average school menu in West Virginia can read like the offerings at a glutton's dream buffet.

While the food choices may appear unhealthy, administrators say they are sneaking in nutrition to combat childhood obesity in a state where 13.7 percent of children were overweight in 2005.

In schools across the state, fat and calories are being cut by furtively supplementing hamburgers with soy and subbing applesauce for shortening in cake.

"We get a lot of criticism for serving pizza so often, but the cheese is low fat and the crust is whole grain," said Richard Goff, director of the state Department of Education's Office of Child Nutrition.

The faux-junk food push is the nutritional equivalent of making airplane noises while zooming a spoonful of food into a child's mouth: a dressy distraction intended to get children to clean their plates.

One breakfast item sold to schools in West Virginia and across the country — deep-fried Super Donuts — are fortified with 5 grams of protein and 14 minerals and vitamins.

"Nutritionally modified junk food is big right now, and it is helpful," said Margo Wootan, director of nutrition policy for Center for Science in the Public Interest.

"When companies improve the nutritional quality of foods they know kids will like, it does make it easier for parents and schools to feed children healthfully," she said. "It can be part of the solution, but it can't be the whole solution."

While the faux-junk food movement may be an appropriate stepping stone to healthy eating, some nutritionists say it could establish bad habits.

"The problem is we can't always have our cake and eat it, too," said Dr. Stephen Daniels, a pediatric cardiologist at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.

He worries that children who grow up eating faux fast foods may have trouble making good food choices as adults.

"There are ways to prepare healthy foods to make them more palatable, but I'm not sure we need to hide them in a doughnut or a hot dog," he said.

New York University Professor of Nutrition and Food Studies Marion Nestle said the idea that children won't eat healthy foods is wrong.

"When you go into the schools that take responsibility, you see kids eating adult food and they're liking it," Nestle said.

A Penn State study released Tuesday found that preschoolers who ate pasta sauce blended with broccoli and cauliflower ate 17 percent fewer calories per meal and didn't complain about any difference in taste.

"I'd rather see parents blending veggies and sneaking them into dishes where they can, rather than going the fake food route," researcher Dr. Barbara Rolls said.

Ann Cooper, director of nutrition services at Berkeley Unified School District in California, said she is appalled that a meal of chicken nuggets, tater tots, chocolate milk and fruit cocktail with high fructose corn syrup meets the nutritional requirements under the national school lunch program.

"We don't need to put tricks into food, it's just another processing mechanism and that is not enough," Cooper said.

At Piedmont Elementary School in Charleston, a breakfast offering is "Pancake on a stick," a variation on corn dogs with sausage and pancake batter, to be dipped in syrup. For lunch, pepperoni and cheese-stuffed pizza breads. Bologna sandwiches for snacks.

"The kids won't eat brown beans, and they don't like kale," principal Stephen Knighton said. "But they do love their salad bar, and we try our very best to get some nutrition into these kids."

gryfonclaw
Tue, May-01-07, 20:42
Or maybe we can just serve whole, nutritious foods and they just don't get to eat if they don't like it? Kind of like how a lot of people were raised?

Why are we pandering to the tastes of pre-schoolers?

Why do I ask so many questions? :lol:

serrelind
Wed, May-02-07, 05:30
That's what kids need... more fake modified junk :o

Voo36
Wed, May-02-07, 08:58
The only thing about modified foods... most of it is still buried under a ton of sugar, which is the most appealing of all tastes to our fructose trained taste buds.

Then when you try to switch to healthy, whole foods, which is absolutely the only way to ever get our country off the Obesity track we're plunging down... Well, the taste can be quite bland when compared to fried twinkies or 1000 cal per slice pizza.

KatieAZ
Wed, May-02-07, 10:25
Ann Cooper is amazing! I saw her on CNN and everything that she puts on her menu is fresh and whole.
I work in a school and I won't touch the foods. I think that it is APPALLING that we as a country choose to serve our children this crap. 2/3 children will have dieabetes by the time they are 18. Not that lunch ladies are to blame but everything is packaged and shipped in. hardly anything is actually cooked from whole foods. its process and littered with preservatives. we are poisoning our children and not teaching them the healthy way of eating.

DietMonstr
Wed, May-02-07, 11:02
Or maybe we can just serve whole, nutritious foods and they just don't get to eat if they don't like it? Kind of like how a lot of people were raised?

Why are we pandering to the tastes of pre-schoolers?



EXACTLY. You can't sacrifice good health because the kids would rather have donuts instead of fruit. People amaze me the way they choose to spoil their kids rather than discipline them to grow up to be good, healthy adults. No wonder these kids won't eat their vegetables! Growing up, it was Mom's way or the highway, even though I'm not at optimal health, I still enjoy different veggies and fruits are a great treat because at my house, fruit was dessert. Not that everyone would be this way, but at least I got some kind of foundation. Allowing your kids to eat junk food all the time just sets them up for failure! Imagine trying to break a 30 year addiction! Crazy.

cartersg1
Fri, May-04-07, 10:27
My daughter will start kindergarten next year and I'm already contemplating what I will need to do for her lunches. I will not let her BUY lunch unless I'm out of town for an extended period and not able to do it. But even so, it will SO EASY that DH could do it, if he applies himself.

She loves veggies and fruit so she will get carrots, apple slices, melon, strawberries and any other fruit she wants. I will make up salads with a little bit of hard-boiled egg or chicken and maybe some home-made chips for same crunch. DD also loves popcorn and pretzels and nuts. AND I can make good wheat-free breads that she will eat. Leftovers are great. I'm really good at this and it won't take more than an hour or so on Sunday afternoon to whip up lunches for the whole week. No way she will eat cafeteria food. AND she will be able to make some menu choices. Once in a while, yes, she can have a sugar-laden snack. ONCE IN A WHILE!!! :agree:

A salad bar is great but what about the fat-laden, sugar-laden dressings and toppings?? Granted, when I used to be able to eat a deep-fried doughnut, it was so savory good that it created a sugar addiction (which led to alcohol addiction). Being off all the junk makes me realizes just how detrimental it all was. I don't want my daughter to have to worry about it.

OH - my MIL bought these sugar-laden "Easter eggs" while DD and DH were visiting over Easter break. Our nephew can't have corn so he can't have corn syrup (not a tragedy, I try to tell his mom) so OTC candy is out. Gads - that silly egg is nothing but frosting and consider a single serving. 99 grams of sugar!!! NO WAY! I tossed both of them without hesitation. Actually, one of them is in frig, in view of DD when she opens it, and she not asked for it. I'm proud of her and I provide a million other things to eat to tempt her away from all the sugar.

So wrestling with food is tough - schools are under pressure to purchase bulk, processed items to keep down costs. I DARE any school to really offer good stuff. Who says "need" all of this junk? We've been taught that childhood isn't childhood without a Happy Meal - guilt and marketing. DH actually believes that DD will say remorsefully that Mom never let her have a Happy Meal, let alone a toy from it. Hello?!?!? It wasn't invented until DH and I were in high school (or college) and it wasn't part of our childhood. It is not a rite of passage in this household. Schools do what they can but it is the lowest common denomintor. Moms aren't home to fix lunches anymore and if they are, it's not any better than what the school serves. Children are worth more than just PB&J on white bread every day.