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  • 1
    May
    2013
    10:29am, EDT

    NYC public school swaps chicken nuggets for tofu, becomes first all-vegetarian cafeteria

    Lalita Kovvuri / NYC Department of Education

    Vegetarian lunch is served: A vegetarian meal at P.S. 244 in Flushing, Queens.

    By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Braised black beans and plantains. Tofu roasted in Asian sesame sauce. Falafel and cucumber salad. These aren't menu items from a high-end restaurant; they're lunchtime grub for students at a Flushing, Queens, public school's all-vegetarian cafeteria, the first in New York City to nix meat and believed to be one of the first public school in the nation to serve only vegetarian fare.

    P.S. 244 in Flushing, the Active Learning Elementary School, which opened in 2008, gradually started offering vegetarian meals more and more days a week, reducing the days per week they served traditional cafeteria food like chicken nuggets, said P.S. 244 principal and co-founder Robert Groff.

    "The founding of our school was based on health and nutrition and teaching kids how to make healthy choices in the belief that they would be more successful academically and in their life," Groff said. "But then we started to watch the kids. One, what they would bring in to school, and two, what they would gravitate towards in the cafeteria."

    Administrators noticed a higher number of vegetarian meals in the cafeteria, he said, partially because of the school's population: P.S. 244 is about 70 percent Asian and Indian. The switch to meatless — which the school did in partnership with nonprofit organization New York Coalition for Healthy School Food — was seamless.


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    "Our head cook is also a vegetarian herself and a parent in the school," Groff said.

    P.S. 244, which serves 400 students from pre-kindergarten through grade three, went all-vegetarian in January, but was just publicly recognized by the New York city schools chancellor, Dennis Walcott, during a visit on Tuesday.

    “I am proud of the students and staff for trailblazing this extraordinary path,” Walcott said in a news release. 

    Lalita Kovvuri / NYC Department of Education

    Elementary schoolchildren at P.S. 244 in Flushing, Queens, enjoy a vegetarian lunch on Tuesday during a visit by New York Schools Chancellor Dennis M. Walcott.

    Other items on the menu at P.S. 244 include tofu vegetable wraps, vegetarian chili served with brown rice, and black bean and cheddar quesadillas served with salsa and red roasted potatoes. Each meal has the same amount of mandatory USDA protein requirements as their meat counterparts have in other public schools.

    Breakfast is also served, and that's vegetarian, too. Students start out their day with bagels and cream cheese, whole-grain banana bread, egg and cheese roll-ups, to name a few of the offerings from this month.

    "We know that when students eat a healthy diet, they're able to focus better. Their immune systems are stronger, so they're sick less, and then they're in school more and they're able to focus and concentrate better, and therefore learn better. There's research about that," said Amie Hamlin, the executive director of New York Coalition for Healthy School Food, which has worked with P.S. 244 for several years.

    Not all "typical" Department of Education meals have been removed from the cafeteria: Pizza Fridays are still on the menu, just without the pepperoni. Groff said most parents have greeted the changes warmly, and for those who haven't, he encourages them to send their children into school with their own lunches.

    "That, alone, providing the options for the kids makes the difference," he said. 

    The move to all-vegetarian has been in parallel with New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg's citywide health efforts.

    "We've been watching how the mayor has been responding to something like sugary beverages or the smoking ban, and that was an opportunity for us, because we could see the direction the city is moving," Groff said. "We could move along with it to create the healthiest options for our kids." 

    370 comments

    I can see the kids eating the fruit and pasta on that plate but not the rest of it. I wonder what will happen when parents start complaining about the school starving their children because the child won't eat what the school serves. Note to self: don't move to NYC because big brother has already ta …

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    Explore related topics: new-york, vegetarian, queens, elementary-school, public-school, school-lunch, ps-244
  • 21
    Mar
    2012
    5:32pm, EDT

    NYC school official: No more pink slime for lunch next fall

    In this undated image released by Beef Products Inc., boneless lean beef trimmings are shown before packaging. The debate over "pink slime" in chopped beef is hitting critical mass. The term, adopted by opponents of "lean finely textured beef," describes the processed trimmings cleansed with ammonia and commonly mixed into ground meat. Federal regulators say it meets standards for food safety. Critics liken it to pet food — and their battle has suddenly gone viral amid new media attention and a snowballing online petition. (AP Photo/Beef Products Inc.)

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    NEW YORK CITY -- Steak it ain't. School officials in New York City say that this fall they’re going to toss out the "pink slime" meat filler used in ground beef products served up in school cafeterias.


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    In New York City's 1.1 million-student school system, officials said Wednesday that they’re working with food vendors to phase out products containing pink slime that are dished out as burgers, spaghetti sauce and sloppy joes. They said they have heard enough concerns from parents and food advocates.

    "We're phasing it out by September -- they will no longer be served in our schools," Schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott said Wednesday, according to NBCNewYork.com.


    Read NBCNewYork.com’s story on the pink slime phase-out

    The change follows an online campaign by advocates for healthier food to rid school cafeterias of what the meat industry calls "lean, finely textured beef," but critics derisively call pink slime. The low-cost filler is made from fatty meat scraps that are heated to remove most of the fat, then treated with ammonium hydroxide gas to kill bacteria such as E. coli and salmonella.

    Pink slime has been on the market for years, and federal officials argue it is safe. The National Meat Association has noted that ammonium hydroxide is also used in baked goods, puddings and other processed foods.

    The USDA recently announced that, in response to requests from school districts nationwide, it will offer schools a choice: 95 percent lean beef patties made with the filler, or less lean bulk ground beef without it.

    “School districts are in the same boat as parents, and they’re still trying to figure out what the pink slime is,” Diane Pratt-Heavner, spokeswoman for the Maryland-based School Nutrition Association, told msnbc.com on Wednesday. “What is important to clarify here is that this is not a school-food issue, this is a ground beef issue.”

    Safeway to stop buying pink slime beef filler

    Several U.S. school districts said they would change their cafeteria menus by next fall. At Florida's Miami-Dade school system, the nation's fourth-largest district, with 345,000 students, officials also announced plans to eliminate the meat in September.

    Others decided to remove the ammonia-treated meat immediately.

    Tony Geraci, executive director of child nutrition for the schools in Memphis, said the 110,000-student district hasn't used the product since October. Geraci described pink slime as a "a horrible product" and not fit for human consumption.

    Pratt-Heavner said don't blame the lunch lady, changes will come slowly and each district must act appropriately.

    "Like all customers at the store, school districts will have to ask about their product and what it is," she said.

    Msnbc.com readers also were quick to respond to the district’s move.

    “The food companies/school district officials are finally waking up and actually want kids and adults to eat healthy and real beef,” Shantelle Roberts posted on msnbc.com's Facebook page.

    This article includes reporting by The Associated Press, Msnbc.com's Sevil Omer and NBCNewYork.com.

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    66 comments

    Good job to all the schools getting rid of it.

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    Explore related topics: nyc, school, lunch, pink, usda, slime, school-lunch, school-lunches, pink-slime

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