Archive for category First Lady Michelle Obama

Someone’s in the Kitchen with Uncle Sam

Not quite the Dinah song, but clearly a spirited shout-out to the National Archives for putting together a phenomenal exhibit, “What’s Cooking, Uncle Sam?” The answer quite simply is that everything we know about food in this country has some piece of history attached to it and the exhibit underlies the strong connection.

In the past few years since the Obama Administration took office, it seems that food has become a major player in the national conversation. We have talked about the White House Garden, the commitment to getting people to Move off the couch and be aware of their food intake. Obesity has been a major topic of concern as has the School Lunch program. Yet, so many of these discussions have their roots in much earlier times. It is impossible to speak of food safety legislation today without thinking about the letter Upton Sinclair wrote President Theodore Roosevelt.

Our current obsession with food, chefs, and food trends is nothing new. Buying local and supporting the farmer has deep-seeded, yes, it’s true, roots in our country’s agricultural history. You’ll be able to study the past while reflecting on how so much of what we believe today parallels our government’s earliest commitments to food safety. No need to make this sound so serious, as the exhibit focuses on all the aspects of our food culture.

What this exhibition hall is filled with it the how the Federal government’s programs intersected with our lives whether we are referencing food safety regulation or tracing the early paths of those we affectionately call “agricultural pioneers.” Besides enjoying the numerous posters from the collection including the already popular “Vitamin Donuts” or “Uncle Sam Says , Garden to Cut Food Costs.” My initial favorite, “Eat the Carp” includes the advice, “The muddy taste can be washed away.”

Trust me, you’ll have fun exploring the original records (“Eat More Cottage Cheese“) that explain the history of our country through its food supply with an emphasis on four distinct influences on our food environment: Farm, Factory, Kitchen, and Table.

Check out the event calendar as numerous additional programs and speakers have been lined up to supplement the standing exhibit. The exhibit opens today and continues through January 3, 2012. You need to know that date as you’ll want to go more than once!

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Time to Refocus Your Geometry: Pyramid Death

Just as color alerts became a confusing part of our daily routines, the food pyramid chart has confounded “new” thinking about food and is about to die a natural death. As in, it will be removed from the visual universe of what we should eat. It is high time the icon was put aside into the annals of food history. Yet, what will the new look say about our food when all is revealed on June 2? The pyramid becomes history, and the plate details the new food visual.

Not just any plate, but one that has been approved by the First Family. A plate that says, less is better but what constitutes less will be unveiled in stages. We have become a full plate society from our parents earliest admonitions to finish your food to dining out and expecting full plates brimming over with food. Oversize restaurant portions were supposed to imply monetary value but instead helped contribute to our obesity numbers.

The President and the First Lady exemplify their commitment to exercise and good eating habits. The White House Garden has been a huge success and farm markets continue to expand in close proximity to the White House. At the same time some of the nation’s top chefs have contributed their time and expertise to improving the school lunch program. Logically, the next step is to take the tired pyramid of foods and replace its message with one that stresses vital health information. This is a more active focus that demonstrates the importance of being active and eating healthy. In addition to the USDA, other government agencies will help drive the important message.

Making the plate a thing of beauty with an emphasis on fruits and vegetables is a natural starting point. After all we are in the heart of the growing season and product availability. Grocers are competing with farm stands to show that locally grown food can be readily available to all shoppers.

Eating healthy has new rules and as a nation the time has come to step up to the plate and move into a healthier position. We welcome the pyramid retirement party.

It’s time to set up a healthy plate.

 

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Vegetable Anarchy

It’s hard to believe that a single vegetable can be the arch enemy of the cafeteria line. We’ve talked plenty about the high caloric count that seems representative of the school lunch program. Jamie Oliver created a Revolution around it and top chefs have joined First Lady Michelle Obama to create front page awareness of the startling and disturbing childhood obesity numbers. Can one food, a vegetable in fact, the lowly potato, mash up such emotion?

According to the USDA, the blame rests with the potato, and the Department wants to cut back its prominence in the school lunch program. Irony of ironies: The Agriculture Department has identified the white potato as its top villain, but the Idaho Potato Commission just received top marks from the American Heart Association for the spud’s benefits. Who’s the villain?

Let me think about that. Is one food responsible for the rise in obesity, diabetes, or heart-related issues? Can there be a negative super-food? Potatoes, even white potatoes, can be served in a number of ways–schools are making adjustments to the fried mentality. Rather than blame one food or one color of food, let’s concentrate on the reality: Overeating is the arch enemy, and we CAN do something about it. At the same time, we cannot lose sight of childhood hunger issues. The School Lunch Program (which for many youngsters now also includes a breakfast tray) is important and in more cases than we want to count, may be the primary sustenance for a significant part of the population.

We can cut back on fried foods and try to introduce additional vegetables into our diets, but remember not everyone’s food budget has the same monetary input. Oliver drew attention to the fact that many of the children and the parents in his test community had no familiarity with fresh vegetables. We can make changes, but we do not need to point fingers at the simple spud. It is not the root cause of the problem! The potato industry has, of course, galvanized its members with a strategic program: Keep Potatoes in School.

Sure the sweet potato appears as the potato survivor, but the school lunch program needs continual, additional re-imaging. The focus must be greater than just delivering the potato its death knell.

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The Shocking Equation: Hunger

No one wants to see a title like this just days before Thanksgiving, but now is the time to focus on one of our nation’s most debilitating problems. We often see people on street corners and in public spaces soliciting for money for shelter or food, but there’s a more hidden problem that seems to be multiplying: Childhood Hunger.

We can help end childhood hunger. Each of us can try to help and contribute time and money to a food bank or give products to various food drives, but the problem is far greater than that. The states have to come on board and contribute money to the schools to get more individuals into school lunch programs. It is an interesting equation that says the more the states do to help alleviate the problem, the greater the financial commitment from the Federal Government.understanding-child

Some wonder, why start with the children? The simple answer is alleviation at that level helps remedy the problem as it invades all aspects of society. When one is hungry, one cannot learn. The correlation proves quite simple. USDA reports that one in four children have been found to be hungry. Staggering.

Organizations are in place. The House needs to pass the legislation, The Healthy Hunger Free Kids Act, that has already cleared the Senate. We cannot sit lamely by and wait for another session before we put food on the table. This commitment is the nexus of what First Lady Michelle Obama has been working on with the myriad of food programs she has advocated. School nutrition and the school lunch program come together into an important, health-saving package.

Now, this Thanksgiving, it is time to fill the table and make certain our children have the food, the right, healthy food, they need to progress. As we share our bounty with those in greater need, let’s hope our country can act quickly and attack this pervasive problem.

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Back on the Beat

I’ve been off key and away for a few weeks as I lost my staunchest advocate, my bright light, and overall, my all-out supporter. Now, it’s time to come out from under my shell and fulfill the promise he so desperately wanted me to achieve: To stay on top of the story and tell it like it is. So here we go.

A lot has happened in the food world, or nothing has happened, depending on your outlook.  Little changes prove noticeable as in the more things change, the more they stay the same. So sameness envelops what’s happening, or not, when we speak of food safety and when the phrase, the FDA gets mentioned.

Yes, folks, it’s an election year and that means paper gets shuffled, but in the fall weeks preceding a November election, time stands still. Any hope of seeing the FDA assume the leadership mantel that was so eloquently promised—review blog entries on FDA and food safety and food recalls--and you’ll notice little change. Sorry, truth is truth. Peanut butter, lettuce, burgers, and eggs are still topics of grave concern and continued surveillance. Without some degree of enforcement, E.coli and Salmonella will continue to be words echoed repeatedly and plague our decision-making.

We have talked frequently about the importance of organics and how some products should only be organic purchases. It seems that the popularity of going organic continues to increase and there are some early indications that the price of organic produce seems to be less out of touch than in earlier years. Irony aside but many stores that have large organic departments also manage to deliver better prices on the organic line-up than their larger chain competitors. Whole Foods continues to accomplish this price-value coefficient. If you need first-hand proof, go to the dairy aisle and check-out organic milk. You’ll be a believer.lunch208345913

Not that there have been miraculous overall changes to the school lunch program, but concern is widespread. Many well-known chefs joined with their nearby school systems and volunteered their time and talent to help implement change. What Jamie Oliver accomplished with his well-publicized Revolution earned him numerous accolades and got couch potatoes to be thinking about more than starches. Then, of course, First Lady Michelle Obama found a judicious cause and continues to champion its direction. Harder to go higher up the ladder than 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue!

Always end with good news, at least that’s what I was taught.

The week has begun. So much to report.

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Chefs to the Rescue

With all the talk about childhood obesity and the dire straits of the school lunch program, the abysmal situation has taken a positive turn. Let’s backtrack a little. The First Lady has been an active, vocal spokesperson for getting our youth off the couches and onto the playgrounds. Michelle Obama has talked repeatedly and eloquently about the obesity problem in this country; that it is killing our future. She demonstrated the importance of fresh foods with the planting of the White House Garden and with her frequent leadership conversations about the importance of eating healthy and being healthy. Look at the Let’s Move program for a start or go thru the archives of this blog to see her commitment to these important issues.

Then there’s Jamie Oliver, the Brit who came across the Pond to teach us how to make changes to what he believes is the killer school lunch program. His Revolution spurred numerous school systems to consider bringing in more local foods and evaluating the foods that currently comprise what our children are given often for breakfast and again at lunch. Many systems are probably breathing a collective sigh of relief that summer recess is almost here; that they have time to make some of the changes that will eventually be mandated.

Then there is the combination effect: The USDA, The White House under the leadership of assistant chef Sam Kass (former personal chef for the family), First Lady Michelle Obama, and the near 1,000 chefs nationwide who have already signed up to contribute their skills and knowledge to the Chefs Move to Schools initiative. Many of these chefs have already visited schools neighboring their restaurants and in other neighborhoods throughout their cities. Recognize the importance of this step. Chefs by nature are very generous in their participation to end hunger (SOS, City Harvest) and in turn they are good fundraisers as their causes often attract members of their community who can put money behind their campaigns.Chefs_Best_Header

Changing the National School Lunch Program has its initial limitations as the Federal Government has been stuck with a third world monetary commitment of under $3 per child per lunch. As Oliver found as he did his quick tour of school cafeterias and brought celebrity attention to this issue, some schools are limited in what they can do as their equipment is minimal while others have what he called impressive kitchens filled with equipment that is not being used to its fullest.

Now what can these busy, hard-working creative chefs accomplish? A lot. Major changes. Just their presence in the schools, their trips to Capitol Hill, and their visibility in the communities can spearhead a campaign to bring about change. With the First Lady championing all aspects of the healthy food campaign, combined with the national prominence of these industry leaders, we will  see changes in the way the school lunch program exists.

We are talking action.

Thanks, Chefs for lending your expertise to this most important food issue.

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We Can Stop The Obesity Death March

Certainly without the attention at the top of the food chain, AKA, First Lady Michelle Obama, much of what is being written about obesity and much of what is being done would not be getting the stellar attention it has; that it needs. We have followed the early beginnings of  her interest in issues of food and well-being with the planting, supervision, and enjoyment from last year’s first Victory Garden at the White House to her involvement with the local community and the creation of an additional Farm Market near the White House.

The trail led others, for instance, Jamie Oliver, to cross the pond and discuss the horrid obesity statistics in the US. Then there were the various other food mavens (Alice Waters) who got in on the act to remind people, consumers, that they, too, have a long-held interest in this topic. Now everyone seems to have lined up in an orderly fashion behind the leader of the band, The First Lady. Each First Lady traditionally takes on a cause. This one strikes home more than most. It affects a larger cross-section of the population than most and has a terrible effect on speeding through life too quickly: Early Death.

Yes, there are a lot of contributing factors. School Lunch programs deserve some of the blame with their insistence on antiquated guidelines that place too much emphasis on carbs. Food choices in these programs are little better with too much interest in pre-packaged foods such as pizza and chicken tenders. Not good. Then there are the numerous fast food chains that trip over each other to offer low cost foods. Well, if your budget is on the continuing downhill decline, then $1 meals, regardless of what they are, serve a functionality that cannot be beat: They feed people at an affordable price. The end result may not be a pretty picture!

Now where is this all going. Just this week the First Lady’s program of getting people out and moving (Let’s Move) and eating healthy found lots of new friends, in this case, government agencies that would be coming together to get the message out and provide the muscle to make it work. OK: the commitments. The White House Task Force on Childhood Obesity has 70 recommendations in its 124-page report. One of its strongly worded goals is to reduce childhood obesity which has been steadily climbing since the 1970s from its current level at 20% to 5% by 2030: “Solving the Problem of Childhood Obesity Within a Generation.”

The First Lady believes these goals will help reduce the childhood obesity epidemic by working with the child, the family, and the community. Some of the strategies include an emphasis on prenatal care and improved child care settings. Getting food manufacturers (Heinz and Kraft have already committed to reduced sodium levels in some foods) to improve their labels and improve their foods. There is also interest in improving nutritional education and getting children more physically active.

A number of government agencies will be at the forefront of change from the FCC that will monitor the ways food is marketed to children and the DOT which is rolling out the National Center for Safe Routes to Schools with improved biking and walking access. The First Lady recognizes that the task is enormous and involves cooperation from every sector of the private and public universe of agencies and businesses.hlthykids

Fun strategies are already in place to get young people interested. USDA will partner with the International Game Developers Association to host game jams in US cities next weekend, May 21-23 with the idea of producing video game prototypes. Remember the Apps for Healthy Kids competition continues until the June 30 deadline.

We can all cooperate and make this work. Too many lives are at stake.

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A School Lunch Update

Some things change; some stay the same. Pressure can often necessitate the Mother of Invention to downgrade the process a little. OK, what’s the focus? Remember the progressive approach to curbing childhood obesity in the DC schools? That was a daring proposal that would move the city and charter schools into the limelight of social responsibility.

The good news first: The proposal was approved unanimously by the City Council, but with one caveat. The calorie limitations were removed. In keeping with the USDA guidelines for The HealthierUS School Challenge and its potential monetary awards, the proposal stayed within the USDA guidelines for fear of not qualifying for the necessary Federal funds.

Yes, the USDA is reviewing the entire School Lunch Program. It would be impossible to miss the numerous discussions surrounding obesity and school lunch initiatives. If they have not figured out the necessity of addressing these issues from the current wave of discussion from the First Lady, from Jamie Oliver’s Revolution, and the almost limitless analysis from various health agencies, they totally missed the boat. Certainly possible to keep everything the same, but definitely a regressive, unsafe response!

The Program must continue to go under the microscope. What is currently in place is not working. We are feeding our children an unhealthy diet and contributing to the devastating waistline issue. Time to act and slim down the process.

pantherLet’s Move.

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DC Joins the Fray

Talk about a hot button issue; that’d be the soda tax. Here’s another one, unhealthy school meals. Combine the two and what do you get: A novel approach to meet the message from First Lady Michelle Obama and her emphasis on healthy eating and getting our children out moving.

A DC Council member, Mary Cheh, has proposed a way to support her earlier proposal, the Healthy Schools Act of 2010. Her data is startling as DC’s adolescent population has the highest obesity rate in the nation. It seems there are plenty of categories of startlingly high obesity, remember Huntington, WVA?

Cheh’s proposal would get more money into the school lunch program, provide free breakfast and move that meal into the classrooms where the majority of students are at the poverty level. The list goes on: Improve the meals by adding a strong local food component, drop the reduced lunch budget (get rid of the co-payment) in favor of providing a healthy, free meal, and get the students into an exercise program of at least 60 minutes daily. School gardens would be encouraged. Actually the list of possibilities is almost endless in moving forward in this direction with its emphasis on low-calorie and low-fat foods.

How doable is all of this? Cost will be an issue, but Councilwoman Cheh plans to propose a penny an ounce tax for soda. That concept, of course, is controversial. Yet, necessity may make this strategy a natural, driving force. As DC schools continue to improve in terms of academic performance, they need to focus on the individual student who is suffering from health issues and struggling to have a healthy lifestyle. Of course, they are not the only school system with a lunch program that needs a major overhaul. This proposal may move them to the forefront of strong, positive action in driving healthy results. The Council has approved the bill and it goes to a final vote this week with enactment scheduled for this coming August.

Stalling on such a concept does no one any good. When we speak of the lives of our children, such moves at this particular Act should be applauded. The current path leads us nowhere.

Maybe DC’s actions will move them into the win column for the HealthierUS School Challenge. Let’s go for the Gold!HUSSCspotlightimage

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Jamie’s Revolution

It’s possible that a chef from another country, albeit a famous one, can turn around the American school lunch program and get parents, teachers, administrators, and government personnel to understand the dire state of the food world in this country. Healthy food topics abound and First Lady Michelle Obama has certainly become the serious face for eating and living lives as she continues to work with young people to get them focused on the importance of a healthy lifestyle. It is possible that Jamie Oliver’s work may become a turning point for those who have ignored the crisis. We cannot throw out his efforts; we need his help.

One word he continually uses is “processed foods.” He’s amazed at how little students know about fresh foods and even what some of those foods look like. In his tour of schools and work with students and families, he continues to see the processed pattern of consumption. Or the simple translation: No one knows for sure what is in those foods as opposed to eating from scratch cooking. Yes, it is a daunting task to ask lunch personnel to make food for 1,000 individuals from scratch on a daily basis, but he is unwavering in his mission. He believes this strategy will save lives and reduce early, young deaths from causes linked to obesity.

His website has become a menu and recipe haven. No longer can anyone say they have no idea how to prepare an item. He even has guidelines for school personnel and administrators to get on the program. Maybe it’s not a revolution per se, but a reality check. One that can save literally thousands of lives. His goal is quite simple: Fresh, tasty, and nutritious foods.lrg_688

Judging by the number of individuals (over 200, 000 to date) who have signed his petition for healthy foods in the schools, Oliver’s mission is making history.

It’s time.

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