Sentences with phrase «cafeteria trays as»

The kitchen also makes money transporting grassfed meats from Shenandoah processors to local restaurants, and Curtin believes the less desirable cuts — such as beef chuck — could easily end up as burgers on cafeteria trays as part of a bartering arrangement with restaurateurs.

Not exact matches

At summer camp, I reimagined the cafeteria offerings as chopped salads for fellow campers, pulling the chicken entrée with a fork, making vinaigrettes with the honey packets from the tea station, mustard from the sandwich bar, and the oil and vinegar from the condiment tray.
-- A cafeteria tray had more than 10 times as many germs as a toilet seat (33,800 bacterial cells per square inch vs. 3,200 bacterial cells per square inch).
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.
As she stirs a steaming tray of mashed potatoes, Juarez Community Academy cafeteria manager Emma Leachman keeps a watchful eye on her staff of 13 and an open heart to the young people whose hugs and frank complaints measure the value of her work.
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.
I've had cafeteria workers forbid me from taking pictures of food on the lunch line itself, with no explanation, and have had school officials watch me like a hawk as I took pictures of the food on children's trays.
My feeling about milk in schools, as shared by many TLT readers (judging from this morning's discussion on the Facebook page and in comments on the blog), is that milk does have a place on lunch trays, but not to the exclusion of other beverages like water (which, as it turns out, is not so easy to get into cafeterias) and plant - based milks for those who drink them.
I haven't yet researched it, but my sense is that this waste is only growing in quantity as school districts move from what many of us remember from childhood — on site cafeteria cooking with reusable trays and real silverware — to food prepared off - site and packaged for reheating.
You would be totally unable to describe the perfectly timed choreography with which your muscles contract and relax as you navigate around other people in a cafeteria while holding a tray, yet you have no trouble doing it.
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