Thanks for coming
by The Lunch Tray and sharing your thoughts.
-LSB-...] enough pink slime has ended up on our children's school lunch trays, brought to highlight
by The Lunch Tray blog.
Thank you, Andrew, for coming
by The Lunch Tray to share information about October Unprocessed.
A huge thank you to J.M. Hirsch for coming
by The Lunch Tray!
Many thanks to Kate Adamick for coming
by The Lunch Tray.
Thank you for coming
by The Lunch Tray.
Of course, I immediately contacted her, and she kindly agreed to be interviewed
by The Lunch Tray.
Many thanks to Philip Lee for coming
by The Lunch Tray today!
Bonnie: First, just want to thank you for taking the time to stop
by The Lunch Tray and to leave your comments.
That's why I was so excited to see this video
by The Lunch Tray circulating on the internet.
Here's a photo sent to me just this week
by a Lunch Tray reader of her child's lunch:
I'd like to comment on the picture submitted
by a Lunch Tray reader of her child's lunch.
Well, I've been roundly criticized
by Lunch Tray readers today for accepting so easily my district's explanation on why we use a flimsy spork instead of plastic forks and knives in our cafeterias.
Well, I've been roundly criticized
by Lunch Tray readers today for accepting so easily my district's explanation on why we use a flimsy spork instead of plastic forks... [Continue reading]
In response to Mike I'd like to say, first and foremost, thank you so much for taking the time to come
by The Lunch Tray these past few weeks.
Horribly enough pink slime has ended up on our children's school lunch trays, brought to highlight
by The Lunch Tray blog.
Thanks for stopping
by The Lunch Tray!
I'll go look at the website now, and thank you for coming
by The Lunch Tray.
Brandon: Thanks for stopping
by The Lunch Tray.
Thanks for coming
by The Lunch Tray — I greatly value the input of readers who are school food professionals and can share their real world experiences.
And, by the way, Jeanne has signed on as the «dessert blogger» for the virtual Food Day progressive dinner party hosted next week
by The Lunch Tray, Red, Round, or Green and Eat Dinner.org.
So when Poppendieck herself came
by The Lunch Tray yesterday and took me to task for some things I've recently written about the School Nutrition Association (SNA), the nation's leading organization of school food professionals, you can imagine how hard that criticism hit home.
Janet: Thanks very much for coming
by The Lunch Tray to leave this comment.
Not exact matches
By: Bettina Elias SiegelMSNBC has a story up today about a practice that's old news for school food services directors, but may not be widely known by TLT (The Lunch Tray) readers — i.e., quietly giving «alternative» meals to students who come through the lunch line without the ability to... Read mo
By: Bettina Elias SiegelMSNBC has a story up today about a practice that's old news for school food services directors, but may not be widely known
by TLT (The Lunch Tray) readers — i.e., quietly giving «alternative» meals to students who come through the lunch line without the ability to... Read mo
by TLT (The
Lunch Tray) readers — i.e., quietly giving «alternative» meals to students who come through the lunch line without the ability to... Read
Lunch Tray) readers — i.e., quietly giving «alternative» meals to students who come through the
lunch line without the ability to... Read
lunch line without the ability to... Read more
Reposted with permission
by: Bettina Elias SiegelLast month on The
Lunch Tray's Facebook page I shared a link to an eye - opening special report in Parents Magazine about hunger in America.
Flanked
by fellow undergrads at a
lunch table, the most improved player in college basketball is annihilating his
tray's contents — bacon cheeseburger, fries, fruit cup, orange juice — the way he does opponents in the paint.
-LSB-...] few weeks ago I ended my post, «Confessions of a Sideline - Sitter,»
by urging
Lunch Tray readers to get actively involved in improving school food (as well as food -LSB-...]
The
Lunch Tray's Twitter feed selected
by Food Tank as one of «118 Twitter Feeds Every Food Activist Needs to Follow ``
The
Lunch Tray's essay,» Legislate, Educate and Inoculate to Create Food - Savvy Kids,» chosen
by a panel of expert judges (including former FDA commissioner David Kessler) as a winning entry in Slate «s childhood obesity crowd - sourcing effort, March, 2011
Lately I've been contacted on a near - daily basis
by PR agencies asking to have their client's product or services featured on The
Lunch Tray.
Earlier in the week I posted on The
Lunch Tray Facebook page a salmonella warning issued
by Unilever (my former employer - yikes!)
Along with the goodies offered
by my fellow panelists, I'll be giving away a bunch of cool
Lunch Tray magnets (featuring a tiny reproduction of a vintage school lunch poster) as well as two vintage lunch t
Lunch Tray magnets (featuring a tiny reproduction of a vintage school
lunch poster) as well as two vintage lunch t
lunch poster) as well as two vintage
lunch t
lunch trays.
Over a period of weeks or months, I'd be willing to bet, consistently having those fruits and veggies and white milk, etc. show up on kids»
lunch trays —
by their own choosing, sneakily or not — would likely lead to more consumption of those items as familiarity set in and kids, hungry for their
lunches, realized that eating the orange and the salad might be better than leaving the cafeteria only half - full.
The
lunch tray photo which appears on this blog was created by me for the exclusive use of The Lunch Tray and is the subject of a federal copyright registra
lunch tray photo which appears on this blog was created by me for the exclusive use of The Lunch Tray and is the subject of a federal copyright registrat
tray photo which appears on this blog was created
by me for the exclusive use of The
Lunch Tray and is the subject of a federal copyright registra
Lunch Tray and is the subject of a federal copyright registrat
Tray and is the subject of a federal copyright registration.
All content on The
Lunch Tray (with the exception of content created
by or licensed from third parties) is © Bettina Elias Siegel, [year of publication, which is indicated in the byline of each post] and is digitally protected
by Digiprove.
(FMSC rebates have been discussed several times previously on The
Lunch Tray, when I pointed readers to good reporting on the issue
by school food blogger Ed -LSB-...]
In writing this post, I can already identify in my head certain
Lunch Tray readers
by name (and you know who you are) who are about to cancel their blog subscription in protest.
And in what ways do these financial incentives (called «kickbacks»
by some) influence how much highly processed food appears on our children's
lunch trays?
So bear with me for a few more weeks — expect delays, as they say — and
by September, The
Lunch Tray should be running at peak efficiency.
A few weeks ago I ended my post, «Confessions of a Sideline - Sitter,»
by urging
Lunch Tray readers to get actively involved in improving school food (as well as food outside the school setting).
When I recently discussed my decision to advertise on The
Lunch Tray, I mentioned that the ads which appear on the site are selected not
by me but
by Google, based on key words in my text.
My friend Sally Kuzemchak at Real Mom Nutrition recently shared her top 10 most - read posts from last year (it's a great list,
by the way — check it out), and that had me wondering: what
Lunch Tray posts were you reading most often in 2015?
I was thrilled that years of hard work
by food advocates around the country, maybe even including my own small efforts here on The
Lunch Tray, had finally yielded strong federal competitive food rules to create a healthier school environment for my child and his fellow students.
if school administrators weren't too busy to plan and would approve parent volunteer
lunch monitors then parents could fill some of the
lunch room void
by left
by over-extended cafeteria staff and teachers, explaining to kids what
lunch options were and encouraging the healthier choices as well as providing more prompts in the cafeteria as students have their
tray.
However, if you're among the many
Lunch Tray readers with children affected
by food allergies, you may want to stop
by the newsstand and pick up this issue.
Not long after I started The
Lunch Tray in 2010, a new kids» cooking magazine called ChopChop was launched
by Sally Sampson, a James Beard Foundation nominated author of twenty cookbooks, as well as a frequent contributor to magazines like Food & Wine and Bon Appetit.
I won't be posting today as I'm getting ready for the Houston
Lunch Line screening and panel discussion tonight, co-sponsored
by Applegate Farms and The
Lunch Tray.
So, given the centrality of the birthday treat issue on The
Lunch Tray, it was with great delight that I read this message sent to me last week
by a friend and TLT reader:
And one lucky
Lunch Tray reader can win a free copy of the book just
by leaving a comment below
by 6 pm CST, Tuesday August 13th.
Recently I did some housekeeping on The
Lunch Tray by dividing up my «blog roll» (the long list of links down and to the right)
by topic, so if readers are specifically looking for help with family dinner or need sources for food policy information, they'll know right where to go.