Tuesday, April 30, 2013

What's for lunch 5/1/13


Oven-Baked Breaded Chicken
Buttered Rotini with Garlic & Oil 

Sweet Corn Cobbettes
Fresh Fruit 


 The chicken is Tyson. It is described as "1/2" diced chicken meat" and as "boneless, skinless, and fully cooked." 
The noodles are Barilla Plus. The ingredients are: Semolina, Grain and Legume Flour, Blend (Lentils, Chickpeas, Egg Whites, Spelt, Barley, Flaxseed, Oat Fiber, Oats), Durum Flour, Niacin, Iron (Ferrous Sulfate), Thiamine Mononitrate, Riboflavin, Folic Acid. 

The corn is frozen and the fruit is fresh. The salad bar is available. 

Monday, April 29, 2013

What's for lunch 4/30/13


BETTER THAN A PIZZERIA... Flatbread“Margherita” Pizza
Fresh Tomato Sauce, Basil and Local, FreshMozzarella
Caesar Salad 
Fresh Fruit 

Unlike many schools, we do make these pizzas. This is a white-flour pizza (not whole grain). The sauce is a Red Pack vitamin enhanced tomato sauce. The sodium at 140mg is much lower than we previously used.  Here are the ingredients: Tomato Concentrate (Water, Tomato Paste), Sugar, Soybean Oil, Potassium Chloride, Onion Powder, Salt, Citric Acid, Spice, Garlic Powder, Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid), Black Pepper, Vitamin E (DL-Alpha Tocopheryl Acetate), Natural Flavor, Vitamin A (Retinol Palmitate). 

The sides look great - fresh fruit  is a terrific source of fiber and kids like it. The salad will have romaine, tomatoes and croutons. 

The salad bar and sandwich bar are available as well. 

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Apples at the North Shore Middle School


Apples Prior to the ELA Tests at NS Middle School
The Middle School Nutrition Committee views nutritious and minimally processed whole foods as essential to a developing child. They support educational and food service initiatives that foster a healthy enjoyable relationship with food and empower learners with the tools to make food choices that promote health and well-being.
Denise Rieger, a member of the MS Nutrition Committee, stated, “When Dr. Ferris had read an article about a school in NYC that had barrels of apples available to kids throughout the day, we thought it would be great to get some fruit for the kids during state testing to give them some nutrients before sitting for the tests.” She continued, “We decided to ask for donations of apples since they would be easier for the kids to grab and eat.”
After numerous emails were sent out to local supermarkets, David and Amy Mandell, middle school parents and owners of Holiday Farms and Locust Valley Market, generously donated 700 apples for students to enjoy prior to their tests. Mrs. Rieger, stated, “The apples were a big hit. Teachers were so excited to see all the kids eating the apples and came up to thank the Nutrition Committee for handing them out. They even said we should do this every day!" 
Childhood obesity is a growing epidemic in the United States and throughout the world. One medium apple with the skin contains only 95 calories, whereas the average-sized candy bar can have anywhere from 180 to 270 calories. Choosing nutrient-dense and lower-calorie foods such as apples in place of refined, fatty or high-sugar foods can help reduce your child's total calorie intake throughout the day and promote healthy weight.
Obesity in children can cause bone deformities, arthritis, asthma, sleep disturbances, high blood pressure and cholesterol, gallstones, fertility problems later in life, diabetes and depression among a list of other complications. You can avoid weight gain in your child by giving him or her nutritious, balanced meals and healthy snacks throughout the day that meet within his daily caloric needs.
For more information on the Middle School Nutrition Committee and listings of the ingredients of the cafeteria food and healthy recipes and articles, please visitwww.nsmsnutrition.blogspot.com

What's for lunch 4/29/13


Applegate®
The Great Organic Beef Hotdog

Roasted Potatoes 
Sauerkraut ~ Baby Carrots 
Fresh Fruit
Gluten free if taken without the bun

The hot dogs are from Applegate Farms - so they are far better than many hot dogs but are hot dogs nonetheless. They have 8g of fat and 330mg of sodium. The ingredients are just: beef, water, sea salt, less than 2% of the following: celery juice, sodium lactate (from beets), lactic acid starter culture (not from milk), onion powder, spices, garlic powder, paprika. They have 6g of fat(2.5g saturated) and 380 mg of sodium. They are dairy-, casein- and gluten-free. They promote it as nitrate-free but this NYT article indicates the nitrate issue is tricky - andcites the company saying their bacon has the same level (naturally) of cancer-causing nitrates as conventional brands.  You may also not want your kids growing up thinking hot dogs are a good lunch given the potential link between processed meats and cancer. The bun is whole wheat.   

The sauerkraut I believe is canned but don't quote me on that. Carrots and fruit are fresh. 
The salad bar is available for sides and as a full lunch. 

I tried this smoothie this weekend and the kids loved it. The cucumber gives it a refreshing taste. 

Cucumber-Blueberry Smoothie

This smoothie of cucumber and blueberries is brimming with antioxidants. It makes a great start to any day for breakfast or a midmorning snack.
Everyday Food, January/February 2011
  • YieldServes 2

Ingredients

  • 1 medium cucumber, peeled, seeded, and cut into 1-inch pieces
  • 1 cup frozen blueberries
  • 1 cup white grape juice or pear juice
  • 1/2 cup low-fat plain yogurt

Directions

  1. Blend cucumber, blueberries, juice, and yogurt.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

What's for lunch 4/25/13

Homemade Mac N'Cheese
Caesar Salad 
Fresh Fruit 

The noodles we're using for the Mac n cheese are Barilla Plus. The ingredients are: Semolina, Grain and Legume Flour, Blend (Lentils, Chickpeas, Egg Whites, Spelt, Barley, Flaxseed, Oat Fiber, Oats), Durum Flour, Niacin, Iron (Ferrous Sulfate), Thiamine Mononitrate, Riboflavin, Folic Acid. The sauce is made from Wisconsin Cheddar.

Caesar salad is romaine lettuce, tomatoes and croutons. Fresh fruits.

I just purchased the "Nutribullet" it is like a mini Vitamix and I absolutely love it ! You can juice and blend at the same time, make soups and nut butters with it. Here is a recipe that is a hit in my house. 


Dandy Blueberry Greens Smoothie

Dandy Blueberry Green Smoothie

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Keep those nasty winter colds away with this antioxidant- and phytonutrient-rich smoothie. Dandelion greens are loaded with calcium, iron and they are great for detoxing the liver. Power it up with banana (potassium) and hemp seeds (EFAs), too.
Tools:
Blender
Ingredients:
Try to buy everything organic. Here’s why.
5-7 stems of dandelion greens
1 1/2 cups blueberries (fresh or frozen)
1 handful of sweet pea sprouts
1 handful of mixed greens
2 1/2 cups coconut water (or pure water)
1-2 tsp raw, wild-harvested honey
1/2 banana (optional)
2 tsp hemp seeds (optional)
*You can sub any sweet sprouts that you like for sweet pea sprouts. If you can’t find dandelion greens, just use any greens you like.
Let’s get started.
Pack your blender and mix until smooth. Enjoy!
Note: Dandelion greens can be a tad bitter, so if you like, give them a quick steam (1-2 minutes) to curb any bitterness, and then cool in the fridge before you blend them up. You can also add extra honey or banana.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

What's for lunch 4/24/13

FARM FRESH BURGERS
Hamburger or Cheeseburger
with all the trimmings
Homemade coleslaw
Oven baked fries
Fresh Fruit 
Gluten Free without the bun 


After much work, discussion and research, our district has discontinued the use of most USDA commodity beef for a variety of health reasons and contracted with a New York State farm to provide beef raised without antibiotics and hormones. It is more expensive and there is less beef on the menu as a result but it is a huge improvement in the quality of our lunches. So, enjoy your hamburger on a whole grain bun.   The cabbage for the coleslaw is fresh and so is the fruit. 

The fries are McCains.  They are flash or par-fried and then baked. I think they have only 25mg of sodium and 4g of fat. Ingredients are: Potatoes, Vegetable Oil (contains one or more of the following oils: Canola, Soybean, Cottonseed, Sunflower, Corn). Contains 2% or less of Annatto (color), Caramel Color, Dextrose, Sodium Acid Pyrophosphate Added to Preserve Natural Color.  Skip the fries and load up on sides at the salad bar. 


Monday, April 22, 2013

What's for lunch 4/23/13

Souvlaki Plate
Marinated chicken with sweet pepper and onions
on a warm whole wheat pita
Tzatziki Sauce
Greek salad w/chickpeas
Fresh Fruit 


The chicken is from Tyson but we marinated in the kitchen. The sweet peppers and onions are fresh. The Tzatiki sauce is homemade.  The greek salad is fresh as well as the fruit. The pita is HFCS free and has minimal ingredients. It is from either Kronos or Athena. 


Happy Earth day everyone !!


Sunday, April 21, 2013

What's for lunch 4/22/13

CBLT
Breaded Chicken
Sunday Bacon, Lettuce & Tomato on
Whole Wheat Bun
Green Bean Salad
Fresh Fruit 

 Chicken is a flash-fried product from Tyson with 10g of fat and 620mg of sodium. Ingredients: Boneless, skinless chicken breast filets with rib meat, water, modified food starch, sodium phosphates, salt. PREDUSTED WITH: Enriched wheat flour (enriched with niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), wheat gluten, salt. BATTERED WITH: Water, enriched bleached wheat flour (enriched with niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), modified corn starch, salt, dextrose, spices, garlic powder, xanthan gum, oleoresin paprika and annatto. BREADED WITH: Enriched wheat flour (enriched with niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), salt, spices, garlic powder, extractives of paprika, natural flavors (spice extractives). Breading set in vegetable oil. 

The turkey bacon does not say "Applegate" on the menu so I can't be sure it is but that's what we usually use. Nonetheless, it is still bacon.  Here are the ingredients: Turkey (Turkey Used Never Administered Antibiotics, Growth Promotants or Animal By-products), Water, Sea Salt, Maple Sugar, Celery Juice, Onion Powder, Spices, Lactic Acid Starter Culture (not From Milk.)  They promote it as nitrate-free but thisNYT article says otherwise - and cites the company saying their bacon has the same level (naturally) of cancer-causing nitrates as conventional brands. The bun is whole wheat and the green beans and fruit are fresh.

You all know how I feel about Tyson so I would opt for the salad bar or Boar's head sandwich bar. This is our last month for soup so take advantage. They are soups the Panera sells.  


Thursday, April 18, 2013

What's for lunch4/19/13


Trattoria Friday 
Spaghetti & Meatballs or
Spaghetti Marinara w/Mozzarella 

Stick Zucchini and Carrot Strips
with Ranch Dip 
Fresh Fruit


The sauce is a Red Pack vitamin enhanced tomato sauce.  Here are the ingredients: Tomato Concentrate (Water, Tomato Paste), Sugar, Soybean Oil, Potassium Chloride, Onion Powder, Salt, Citric Acid, Spice, Garlic Powder, Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid), Black Pepper, Vitamin E (DL-Alpha Tocopheryl Acetate), Natural Flavor, Vitamin A (Retinol Palmitate).  The cheese is a USDA commodity part skim mozzarella.  Ingredients are cultured pasteurized milk, salt, enzymes. The sodium is 240mg/oz.

Whole grain spaghetti with red sauce described above.  Mozzarella stick is part skim.  The zucchini and carrots are fresh along with the fruit. The ranch dip is organic and gluten free. 

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

What's for lunch 4/18/13


BETTER THAN A PIZZERIA... 
Flatbread“Margherita” Pizza
Fresh Tomato Sauce, Basil and Local Fresh Mozzarella
Caesar Salad
 Fresh Fruit 

Unlike many schools, we do make these pizzas. This is a white-flour pizza (not whole grain). The sauce is a Red Pack vitamin enhanced tomato sauce. The sodium at 140mg is much lower than we previously used.  Here are the ingredients: Tomato Concentrate (Water, Tomato Paste), Sugar, Soybean Oil, Potassium Chloride, Onion Powder, Salt, Citric Acid, Spice, Garlic Powder, Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid), Black Pepper, Vitamin E (DL-Alpha Tocopheryl Acetate), Natural Flavor, Vitamin A (Retinol Palmitate). 

 The salad will have romaine, tomatoes and croutons. The fruit is fresh. 

A special thanks to the Mandell Family (of Holiday Farms and Locust Valley Market) for donating 700 apples to the Middle School today.  The kids are being tested this week and it was so great for them to be able to grab a piece of fruit before or after the tests.  Thank you to all my apple washers too !  I will post some pictures of the happy apple eaters as soon as I get them. 

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

What's for lunch 4/17/13


BRUNCH FOR LUNCH
Cinnamon Challah French Toast
Applegate® Sunday Bacon
Baked Potato “Puffs” 
Apple Crisp 

I'm really curious as to why we stopped serving whole wheat french toast to go back to the meal declared to be "cake" for lunch by our committee's nutritionist - basically white flour bread.  The syrup is basically HFCS.  They are looking for an affordable maple syrup but do not have one yet - but they will be limiting the serving size this year in the meantime.  Actual lunch from our schools above. This meal has a lot of sugar, simple carbohydrates -- no whole grains.

The turkey bacon is by Applegate.  Here are the ingredients: Turkey (Turkey Used Never Administered Antibiotics, Growth Promotants or Animal By-products), Water, Sea Salt, Maple Sugar, Celery Juice, Onion Powder, Spices, Lactic Acid Starter Culture (not From Milk.)  They promote it as nitrate-free but this NYT article indicates otherwise - and cites the company saying their products have the same level (naturally) of cancer-causing nitrates as conventional brands. Readmore about nitrates here.


Then there are the commodity potatoes processed by McCain's into tater tots -- although they are labeled "frozen pre-formed potato rounds."  They are flash-fried before they get to the frozen part.  They have 7g of fat (one of which is saturated) and 190mg of sodium. Ingredients are: potatoes, vegetable oil (contains one or more of the following oils: canola, soybean, cottonseed, sunflower, corn). Contains 2% or less of dextrose, salt, sodium acid pyrophosphate added to maintain natural color. I am not a fan of this lunch. Head to the salad bar !!! 

Monday, April 15, 2013

What's for lunch 4/16/13


Oven-Baked Breaded Chicken
Cinnamon Applesauce
Whole Grain Garlic Bread
Sweet Corn Cobbettes 
Herb-Roasted Potato Wedges 
Fresh Fruit 


The chicken is from Tyson. They are flash-fried by the vendor and frozen and then we heat them in the overn. The serving size of two pieces - which is what elementary students get - has 14g of fat and 580mg of sodium.

The ingredients are: Chicken breast tenderloins, water, modified food starch, sodium phosphates, salt. PREDUSTED WITH: Enriched wheat flour (enriched with niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), wheat gluten, salt. BATTERED WITH: Water, enriched bleached wheat flour (enriched with niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), modified corn starch, salt, dextrose, spices, garlic powder, xanthan gum, oleoresin paprika and annatto. BREADED WITH: Enriched wheat flour (enriched with niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), salt, spices, garlic powder, extractives of paprika, natural flavors (spice extractives). Breading set in vegetable oil.  


The corn is frozen. The herb potatoes are frozen from McCain's  Foodservice and are typically a flash-fried and frozen fry, etc. But htey also have USDA plain potato wedges and these might be those. I will try to find out. The fruit is fresh. 

Sunday, April 14, 2013

What's for lunch 4/15/13


ARROZ CON POLLO
Latin-Style Diced Chicken with Red & Green Peppers, Onion & Brown Rice
Cucumber sticks with Dip
Fresh fruit 

The chicken is from Tyson. It is described as "1/2" diced chicken meat" and as "boneless, skinless, and fully cooked." It is chicken breast.

We serve brown (whole grain) rice but in our facilities we cannot cook it per current recommendations to rinse repeatedly and boil in excess water which should be drained (like pasta) to remove as much arsenic as possible. 


The cucumber sticks are fresh and served with an organic ranch salad dressing. The fruit is fresh too.  This dish is gluten free ! 

As always the salad bar is an option and the Boar's head sandwich bar. 

Thursday, April 11, 2013

What's for lunch 4/12/13


SOUTHWEST BOWL 
Brown Rice, Tomato, Cheese, Salsa & Romaine Chipotle Vinaigrette
Add Chicken on Request
Zesty Black Beans~ Sweet Corn
Fresh Fruit


The burrrito bowl is a new item this year.   The brown rice is a great whole grain. The black beans are canned. The southwest-style chicken is from Tyson and described as diced, cooked "chicken meat." Read more about farm animals raised by industrial giants like Tyson, antibiotics and hormones.  The bowl comes from Smokewood Foods. The ingredients are described just as "enriched masa flour" and they look like a big rectangular corn chip. They have 5g of fat and no sodium.  The corn is frozen. I believe everything else is homemade. Not quite sure of the ingredients of the vinaigrette but it is from scratch. I would skip the chicken and go for the veggie version.  I know its important to get protein but I am not so sure the Tyson strips are the best choice.  The fruit is fresh. Salad and sandwich bar are available. 

I do have to say this is strides ahead from the tacos we used to serve in the cafeterias ! Julia Van Loon ( School Food Reform Consultant) along with all the women that work behind the scenes in the cafeteria have done a bang up job !! They work so hard to provide our children with healthier options. I honestly can't praise them enough. On that positive note ..... enjoy the weekend ! 

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

What's for lunch 4/11/13


Souvlaki Plate
Marinated Chicken with Sweet Peppers & Onions on a Warm Whole Wheat Pita Tzatziki Sauce
Greek Salad
 Fresh Fruit 
GF when taken without pita


I am not quite sure of the ingredients in the dish but I know it is a hit at the MS.  The chicken is Tyson  .  The chicken is some kind of frozen Tyson product. I believe it is supposed to be Tyson's "dark meat strips with grill marks" which have 7g of fat and 340mg of sodium, Ingredients are: Boneless, skinless chicken leg meat, water, seasoning (dextrose, salt, brown sugar, chicken stock, maltodextrin, flavors, yeast extract, molasses, disodium inosinate and disodium guanylate), soy protein concentrate, modified food starch, sodium phosphates.BUT we have also gotten diced chicken breast for both Tyson and a company called Pierce before. AND we have also gotten a  USDA commodity chicken from Tyson and described as "fully cooked boneless skinless chicken dark meat chicken fajita strips -smoke flavor added." Here are the ingredients: "Chicken dark meat, water, seasoning [salt, spices, dehydrated garlic, dehydrated onion, sugar, chili powder (chili pepper, cumin, oregano, salt, garlic powder), lemon juice powder (corn syrup solids, lemon juice, lemon oil), modified corn starch, natural mesquite smoke flavor (maltodextrin, natural smoke flavor), natural flavor (from partially hydrogenated soybean and cottonseed oil)], modified food starch and sodium phosphates."  The "partially hydrogenated" oil is a source of trans fat.  Chicken has 7g of fat (2 of which are saturated) and 490 mg of sodium.  Read more about farm animals raised by industrial giants like Tyson, antibiotics and hormones

The peppers and onions are fresh but not organic. The tzatziki sauce is home made. The greek salad is fresh. I believe the pita is whole wheat. GF if taken without the pita. 

On another note, did anyone read the long article in the NY Times magazine "The Extraordinary Science of Addictive Junk Food " ? It was pretty long but very informative. Read the synopsis below. 

A recent article in the New York Times Magazine delves into the science of junk-food craving.By Emily Elert

Betcha Can't Eat Just One
Betcha Can't Eat Just One Evan-Amos, via Wikimedia
In a recent article in the New York Times Magazine, food scientist Steven Witherly describes Cheetos as "one of the most marvelously constructed foods on the planet, in terms of pure pleasure."
The cheese puffs' greatest quality, Witherly says in the article, is its ability to melt in your mouth. “It’s called vanishing caloric density...If something melts down quickly, your brain thinks that there’s no calories in it...you can just keep eating it forever.”
This deception, writer Michael Moss tells us, isn't accidental: snack food companies do a lot of research in order to design foods that fool your mind and bewitch your taste buds into a constant state of craving--a state industry insiders call "the bliss point." To achieve this "bliss point," Moss writes, food designers pay close attention to something called “sensory-specific satiety.”
"In lay terms," Moss says, sensory-specific satiety "is the tendency for big, distinct flavors to overwhelm the brain, which responds by depressing your desire to have more." To avoid this, successful junk food products like Coca-Cola and Doritos consist of "complex formulas that pique the taste buds enough to be alluring but don’t have a distinct, overriding single flavor that tells the brain to stop eating."
The problem, of course, is that eating a lot of junk food has consequences. The act of eating Cheetos may be purely pleasurable, but the feeling you get when you realize you've just eaten an entire bag of cheesy orange puffs is less so.
And that's just the short-short-term: though Moss doesn't say how much the junk food industry may contribute to obesity today, it's clear that America has an obesity problem, and that problem has grown with the rise of the industry: Over the last three decades, obesity rates among American adults have more than doubled, from 15 percent in 1980 to 36 percent in 2010. During the same period, rates of obesity among elementary-school-age kids and teenagers have risen even more sharply, from about 5 percent to 6 percent to more than 18 percent.
A long-term study of the weight and eating habits of 120,877 men and women in 2011 found that the biggest weight-inducing food was the potato chip:
The coating of salt, the fat content that rewards the brain with instant feelings of pleasure, the sugar that exists not as an additive but in the starch of the potato itself — all of this combines to make it the perfect addictive food.