peacetraveler22: (Default)
peacetraveler22 ([personal profile] peacetraveler22) wrote2015-05-26 11:40 am

Несъедобные обеды американских школьников

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At my school, there was no cafeteria. Each morning, my mom awoke early and packed lunch for my sister and me. It grew monotonous, eating the same sandwiches and fruit each day. Secretly, I dreamed of being like my friends who went to public schools, lining up each day to have some old woman with a net around her hair throw slop on my plate. In the U.S., there's constant debate over what school children are fed in the cafeteria. A lot of schools have removed snack and soda machines, and guidelines about nutritional values for school meals are always shifting. Over the weekend, I looked at the menu from my nephew's elementary school, listing the meal choices for each day in the month of May. Common choices include pizza, tacos, hot dogs, hamburgers, chicken nuggets and pastas, all served with some type of vegetable and potatoes or rice. There's always one healthy option like grilled chicken or fish, and a wide-variety of fresh fruit is available for purchase. Yet only the most disciplined of children would pick such options when there are tastier and more indulgent choices placed in front of them each day. All of this creates a very sad picture on the white tray. I grew curious, and began to read about school lunches around the globe, and here's what I discovered!

Look at the culinary delights thrown on these plates from Brazil, Greece and France. The Greek dish looks especially appetizing to me, while the plate from Ukraine has the same sad and pathetic appearance as the USA lunch, filled with greasy sausages, potatoes, cabbage, borscht and a pancake.
my_collage

If the topic is of interest to readers, I can take my camera and join my nephew for lunch one day to explain more about what school kids in the USA eat. Of course, many parents still pack lunches for their children, so they aren't forced to eat this cafeteria slop each day. However, I think there's some level of excitement for most young kids to go through the cafeteria line each day, pick from a choice of foods, and create their own meals. It's a rite of passage for almost all American school children.

What did you eat during your school days? Cafeteria food, or homemade lunches? I have no idea what Russian children are served in cafeterias or dining halls, because I've never once visited a school there. Has it changed a lot from the Soviet era? What happens if the family has no money to pay for a child's lunch, does the Russian government subsidize it?


[identity profile] rostislavddd.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Ужас какой. Наследника слава богу таким не кормят.

[identity profile] den-va.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:11 pm (UTC)(link)
I supose it's not cheese cake ) This is омлет - the dish from egs

[identity profile] peacetraveler22.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Vegetable soup, minestrone, tomato and chicken noodle! :) Also, we eat a lot of cream soups. Cream of potato, cream of broccoli...like in this photo:

 photo broccoli-cheese-soup-2-550-opt_zpsonbwxvod.jpg

[identity profile] ir-cherry.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Дуже приємно, Ірино. :)
Так, від фінансування теж багато чого залежить, але ж і від людей, що працюють, також. Приміром, в наш садочок находять такі самі кошти, як і в сусідній садок, але... Наша директорка купує куряче м'ясо і повар робить з нього будь-що, а інша директора купує сосиски, тому що їх все одно. І курка і сосиски дозволені для дитячого харчування, але ж курка і в Африці курка. :) Вартість курки і сосисок приблизно однакова.
Ну, можливо мені і моїй дитині щастило з їдальнями. :)

offtop: Ви зацікавили своєю ідеєю. ;) Буду вдячна, якщо поділитеся результатом в своєму блогу. :)

[identity profile] peacetraveler22.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:11 pm (UTC)(link)
You do not like any of these lunches? Some of them look tasty! :)

[identity profile] iiiko.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, i wearing dentures. Металло-керамические протезы. Всё стоит $4000. Это очень дорого. Зато красиво))).

[identity profile] pin-gwin.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:14 pm (UTC)(link)
I saw it on the shelves with kind of "special" food, but not always. It is sold there in half pound packages and cost too much so it could not be used as a regular side often.
Here it mentioned in our food chain article.
https://rewards.cub.com/viewhealtharticle.action?path=%2Fus%2Fassets%2Ffood-guide%2Fbuckwheat%2F~default

It make a nice breakfast if add some milk and a bit of honey, like I had today. We buy it from euro/russian stores, way cheaper. The story is that Canada produces a lot of buckwheat, but they sell it to Japan, where they make a special kind of spaghetti of it. In fact, it is a very good source of protein and may be recommended for people who suffer from kidney disease, for example. Unfortunately, it is off American food traditions, as well as black currant.

[identity profile] peacetraveler22.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:14 pm (UTC)(link)
That is good also! I thought it was "Syrniki," which I've eaten many times in Russia. But they are usually round in size.

[identity profile] bellofarniente.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:14 pm (UTC)(link)
1978-1988, Ростовская область. Начальную школу не помню, в старших классах две тарелки - картофельное пюре, или рис, или пшённая каша, или макароны - с гуляшом, или котлетой, или куском рыбы. К этому, с краю тарелки - или солёный огурец, или свекольная икра, или салат из капусты. Вторая тарелка - или пельмени со сметаной (съедобные, кстати), или сырники, или творожная запеканка, или оладьи (полный восторг). Запивайка - чай, компот или какао. Готовили вкусно, всегда всё свежее. Школа очень гордилась столовкой. Плюс был буфет с выпечкой, чаем, соками и салатами.

[identity profile] kremlin-curant.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Cruise was wonderful. But too long onboard time trip and too few stops.
Swagwau train trip was the best. Some day may be I go again, but on another cruise - by boat to the Anchorige, then northbound Alaska by train.

[identity profile] peacetraveler22.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Great! Yes, I love that train. Pure beauty there in Skagway. Such a rugged and remote area. Glad you and your wife had fun!

[identity profile] kremlin-curant.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:19 pm (UTC)(link)
He has nostalgia for soviet Empire, not for delapidated city diners and beer pabs.

[identity profile] Алексей Петренко (from livejournal.com) 2015-05-26 08:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Here is for example a company delivering lunches to the elementary school of my kids: http://www.choicelunch.com/food/
Looks pretty nice.

We've chosen to make the lunches ourselves, however. It's much cheaper with three kids :)
And the kids are making their lunches themselves with minimal help from us and this adds some fun for them too...

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/_kamilfo_/ 2015-05-26 08:21 pm (UTC)(link)
What!?!?!? Ukraine!?!? Where from you've taken this photo!?!? OMG! You should show Ukrainean children what they really have for dinner, because in real life, they eat...another meal.

[identity profile] tessa-vens.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Да, крем-супы это очень вкусно:)

[identity profile] rostislavddd.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Under this beautiful view of bacilli lurk terrible !!! :)

Nowadays maybe I simply don`t know

[identity profile] montrealex.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:22 pm (UTC)(link)
But some 20-25 years ago and I am not telling about my childhood time (too old), a fat girl or boy in a class of 40 students was an exception and, as a rule, suffering from bad metabolism.
We played soccer and hockey, basketball and voleyball, ping - pong and so on, swam in lakes...
In school I generally ate for lunch a half-dozen meatballs (there were like 25% meat and 75% bread) with mashed potatoes or rice, then a slice of bread and a glass of yellowish tea with a teaspoon of sugar in it.
Back home there was a full dinner (by 4 PM or smth) with a soup and chiken, some other meat or fish, a famous kompot (boiled dried fruit beverage) or milk or kefir.

[identity profile] peacetraveler22.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:23 pm (UTC)(link)
The photos came from a British article. I've traveled to Ukraine, but didn't visit any schools. So, tell me please, what do kids eat in the cafeterias?

[identity profile] peacetraveler22.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Are you a vegan? Or, you just claim to be one in your avatar? :)

[identity profile] peacetraveler22.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Did you have to pay for these meals, or they were free?

I don`t know why, but once I was bombarded by LJ blogs

[identity profile] montrealex.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:26 pm (UTC)(link)
wishing to be my friends where school food was described, promoted and so on, with numerous pictures and so forth. I never befriended them, but I think if you go by key words школьное питание you`ll find a whole lot of data on it.

[identity profile] kremlin-curant.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Victoria was also great excursion. Beautiful town. The staff was great. Lot of them could figure out we are Russians by accent, but I didn't see any Russian passengers except us.

Re: Nowadays maybe I simply don`t know

[identity profile] peacetraveler22.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Children were more active then. They didn't have smart phones, iPads, so many video games...it was the same in the USA. We played outside more, rode bikes, etc. I love meatballs! :))

[identity profile] peacetraveler22.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree! It's a cozy, beautiful town but the time there is too short! We were only docked for about 5 hours. There's some law which requires cruise ships traveling to Alaska to make a stop in Canada, that's why they all dock there.

That is why Quebecois hate them.

[identity profile] montrealex.livejournal.com 2015-05-26 08:28 pm (UTC)(link)
They call the French "maudits Français" which means "damn Frogs".

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