Think Outside the Lunchbox

For a quick fix to school-lunch woes, pack an appealing salad and dip 5

On a recent morning, I heard a report on Morning Edition that jolted my attention from an extremely delicious cup of shade-grown fair-trade organic ultra-correct joe. (Public radio and fancy coffee: see Stuff White People Like.)

The radio piece, by NPR correspondent Eleanor Beardsley, was called “In Paris, Culinary Education Starts in Day Care.” Now, as a group, Americans detest being told that any other country does any little thing better than we do here in the good old US of A. Not surprisingly, it is that very attitude that sometimes keeps us from being able to follow a good example, let alone set one. Beardsley’s segment detailed the quality of the food in the public day-care facilities in Paris, where she is stationed. It may come as no surprise, but it is considerably better in every respect than the food served in American schools.

Here is what you would never hear someone say when describing the kitchen in an American school: “A giant pot of apples and clementines simmers away on the stovetop, and cauliflower au gratin bakes in the oven.” Beardsley continues: “While [chef] Morel cuts up garlic and onions to season the braised lamb in fresh rosemary, [chef] Belot peels tomato skins to fashion decorative roses for the pasta-salad appetizer.”

Missing Kitchens

One good reason you won’t hear that description here is that most of our public schools don’t have kitchens. Food is typically reheated (as opposed to cooked) in central commissaries and trucked to the various satellite schools in each district, sometimes spending as much as 4 hours languishing in insulated hotboxes. Meanwhile in Paris, food is cooked from scratch in the kitchens inside each and every one of their 270 public day-care facilities. The ingredients, Beardsley tells us, “are more often fresh than frozen, and the chefs try to use organic products when they can.”

When he signed the School Lunch Act in 1946, President Harry Truman said, “In the long view, no nation is healthier than its children, or more prosperous than its farmers.” This statement is no doubt true, but it lent a false air to the act, which purported to be a nutrition program for the coming baby boom but instead became a boondoggle that helped to create the agro-industrial complex. The system became the dumpster in which large companies could dispose of their lowest-quality, excess commodities.

There are two ways to solve this problem. On an individual level, we can simply brown-bag it, as I did for my children from K thru 12. It can be time-consuming, but not as much as you’d think. Granted I can cook, and today many parents can’t, but that too is a result of the same failed food system in which children no longer learn to cook at their parents’ and grandparents’ apron strings. However, lunch for my two children rarely if ever took me more than 15 minutes to prepare each morning. That’s a quarter-hour that’s easy to come by simply by retiring and awakening that much earlier, or by TiVo-ing or blowing off that episode of The Colbert Report.

Lunch Crunch

But not everyone’s going to have the time, knowledge, and money to cook healthy meals for their kids on a daily basis. A good first step for a more civic, and less individualistic, approach would be to remove the school-lunch program from the maintenance side of a school’s daily operation and into the curriculum side, so that we are not hypocritically teaching kids one thing in health class and quite another in the cafeteria. We don’t have cigarette vending machines in our schools, why do we have soda machines?

Another simple step: spend more on the food. What do you have to spend money on that is more important than your children? That cup of coffee I had while listening to Ms. Beardsley cost more than the average American public-school lunch. And the price of the delicious-sounding meal at her toddler’s Paris day care? About two bucks. The cost argument is a red herring.

President Barack Obama and Congress could move swiftly and easily on this by simply removing the program from the auspices of the USDA, which simply uses it as a dumping ground for excess commodities, and making it a joint program of the Department of Education and the Department of Health and Human Services. Thus our schools could use lunchtime as the teachable moment it truly is, and our healthier kids will learn better in the bargain.

In Their Salad Days

Forget sandwiches—or at least try to for a while. You’ll broaden your horizons and your children’s. Make a big salad and pack it in a pie pan (you can recycle or reuse it). Use some fresh seasonal vegetables and make a quick, easy dip. Include some in-season fruit you have a complete and delicious lunch that kids love. The one in the picture here was made almost entirely of food from the Iowa City Farmers’ Market.

One more trick—include notes to your kids in the brown bag. Comic strips, puzzles, coded messages that tell them you love them, anything that will bring a smile.

Plan. Be organized about it. Most of all, relax and let it be fun.

Pesto Dip

Here’s the recipe for a pesto dip guaranteed to keep them reaching for the fresh veggies.

1/4 cup fresh basil leaves
1 clove garlic
Juice from 1/2 lemon
2 tablespoons fresh Parmigiano cheese, shredded
3 tablespoons olive oil
2 teaspoons fresh-cracked black pepper
1 cup mayonnaise

Puree the basil, garlic, lemon juice, Parmigiano, and olive oil in a food processor or mortar and pestle. Season to taste with black pepper. Fold into the mayo and store. Makes a great dip, or thin with a little water and use as a salad dressing.

Advertisement
Advertisement
  1. mihan's avatar

    mihan Posted 2:43 am
    19 Feb 2009

    Ah, school lunch...When we moved back to the US, I was utterly appalled (and disgusted) at the things we were served. My mom would often pack me a lunch; I loved it, and would often trade with jealous classmates. My favorite was sushi made with leftover rice and other leftover scraps (including weird things like ham) or just strips of omelette.
  2. ivanopal Posted 9:15 am
    19 Feb 2009

    Green Lunch BoxesI would like to see the dollar calculation of the great green luches suggested. If we can appeal to the pocketbook of the average mom who packs these lunchs that would help a lot!

    Samuel
  3. CyberBrook's avatar

    CyberBrook Posted 2:30 am
    20 Feb 2009

    lunchI always send my son packing with his lunch, but it's not really a pocketbook issue. The school lunches are cheap, but so is the food: very unappealing and often unhealthy.
    Also, if we're talking school lunches and being green, I don't know how we can do so without explicitly encouraging more vegetarian meals in addition to as much local and organic as possible. All of this is good in terms of health, environment, and education.

  4. kristen510's avatar

    kristen510 Posted 6:03 am
    23 Feb 2009

    I wish!I hate to say this, but any student who is an athlete or has after school activities is not going to get by on some veggies and dip. It's a nice thought, but this is where the disconnect between idealism and reality happens. I love vegetables, but would not have touched this lunch as a kid. It would have gone straight into the trash bin. It's really tough to create a healthy lunch for a kid with a three hour practice at the end of the school day with nothing but vegetables. And a portable salad? Forget it. That requires a fork, separate dressing, and a large container that won't get smashed in a backpack (as if there is even room in kids' overloaded packs these days). It's up to the school districts to force the cafeterias to provide better food- portable, edible and healthy still don't go together and kids shouldn't be forced to choose between something healthy and something they want to eat.
  5. ibberoo2 Posted 3:49 am
    24 Feb 2009

    many solutionsI think that there is not a one-size-fits all solution here. Yes, it is unconscionable that public school cafeterias serve what they do most of the time. Many of my students would skip lunch rather that poke at a plate of overcooked, overprocessed mystery meat (or veggies? sometimes they were indistinguishable). Get the PTA involved. Hassle the school board. Heck, call or write to the mayor. We're taxpayers and our kids deserve to have access to a good meal.
    In the short term, work with your kids to pack lunches that are healthy, tasty, and will be filling enough. Get them involved in the process. I was involved in all kinds of sports and other school activities in high school and I always had a few snacks with me (fruit, granola, PB&J) that fit in an overstuffed backpack. And I lived, flourished, even.
    Another key element is talking with kids about food and introducing them to the joys of seasonal variety. I grew up in a household where food was so tied into everything and we made all kinds of food together, in spite of busy schedules. My parents didn't give any indication that, say, I wasn't supposed to like brussels sprouts, so I tried -- and enjoyed -- all kinds of things. I  decided for myself to choose fresh fruit over a hostess cupcake.
    Part of this whole debacle which is the current state of our country's view on food stems from unfamiliarity with what our options even are. Well, that and lack of access to fresh, local consumables. Good food in schools is possible, but it's going to take some loud, squeaky wheels. In the meantime, pack good lunches (and snacks).
    (Sorry for the long comment, I get a little worked up about this stuff....)
    http://abikeablefeast.blogspot.com

Add a Comment

You are not logged in. Thus, you cannot post a comment. If you have an account, log in. If you don't have an account, well, by all means go make one! Meet you back here in five.

Hello, Visitor!    Why not register?

Advertisement