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3. Septembre 2011, 00:26:44
Mort 
Then as now, local school districts could receive reimbursement for each lunch served provided it met minimum standards. In mid-1981, only a few months after Reagan took office, Congress cut $1 billion from child-nutrition funding and gave the USDA 90 days--the blink of an eye, for the federal bureaucracy--to come up with new standards that would enable school districts to economize, in theory without compromising nutrition.

The USDA convened a panel of nutritionists and food service directors to ponder what to do. One option on the table--no one later would admit to putting it there--was to "accept catsup as a fruit/vegetable when used as an ingredient." Some panel members seized on this as an opportunity to discuss whether to count ketchup even if used as a condiment. From what I can tell, the motive wasn't so much penuriousness as trying to face facts about what kids would actually eat. USDA standards at the time required that a reimbursable lunch consist of five items: meat, milk, bread, and two servings of fruit or vegetables. Many kids refused to eat the veggies and the stuff wound up as "plate waste." Would-be realists on the panel reasoned that if they could count ketchup as a vegetable they could meet federal standards without having to throw away so many lima beans, thereby saving money while having no impact on the kids. Looked at in a certain light, it made sense. Ketchup wasn't the only newly permissible substitute: pickle relish and conceivably other condiments could also count as vegetables (precise interpretation was left to state officials); protein sources like tofu or cottage cheese could replace meat; and corn chips, pretzels, and other snacks could replace bread. Minimum portion sizes were also reduced, purportedly another effort to reduce waste.

Mid-level Reaganauts at the USDA saw all this as a matter of giving the states more latitude; wiser heads might have realized that the rest of the world would see it as taking food away from children. Unfortunately for Reagan, the 90-day deadline allowed no time for higher review. When the proposed new rules were released for comment in September 1981, food activists went ballistic. Democratic politicians staged photo ops where they feasted on skimpy-looking meals that conformed to the new standards. The mortified administration withdrew the proposal and the USDA official in charge of the program was transferred, a move widely interpreted as a firing.

3. Septembre 2011, 04:07:03
Iamon lyme 
Sujet: Re:
(V): Ketchup is made from tomatos. The tomato is a fruit, not a vegetable.

Another option is the government could close down its free lunch program and provide every family with paper bags, bread, and peanut butter. At one point in my life I was making less money than people on welfare were getting, and I was still able to supply enough food for my kids sack lunches.There were people we knew on welfare who would come to us to "borrow" food, money and toilet paper (who 'lends' toilet paper?) One mother became angry when I tried to suggest how she could make her food allowance stretch out for the entire month. After that, we stopped "lending" to people who had more to work with than we did. You can't fix stupid, so why even try?

3. Septembre 2011, 04:36:15
Papa Zoom 
Sujet: Re:
Iamon lyme: I thought it was a fruity vegetable?

Or is it a fruit for vegetarians? You can't eat it like an apple. I tried once and it exploded!

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