Getting Kids to Eat Their Veggies
Chef Alice Waters has an edible school project: getting children to eat more homegrown fruits and vegetables
- By Anne Broache
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
When kids grow food and cook it and serve it, they want to eat it. All of the very important ideas about sustainability and nutrition come in by osmosis. They're engaged with all of their senses. Once they've spent a year in the program, they know where the compost heap is, they know what compost is, they know when the raspberries are ripe, they know how to plant seeds.
Do adults need an Edible Schoolyard as much as kids do?
They absolutely do. But we need to get to these little kids and begin in kindergarten, so when they grow up, they'll understand this set of values.
What if money's tight and access to farm-fresh food is limited?
We need to learn how to cook. The cheap food that's available to people is killing them, making them sick. I think grocery stores change when people ask for certain things to be put in them, but nobody asks. When you're selling food in season, there's always a good price for one fruit or vegetable.
But how do you convince kids to choose arugula instead of a cookie?
You have to have an educational program to bring you into another relationship with food. Food is about care, and can be about beauty, and communication, and meaningful work, a whole lot of values that are way more seductive than what fast food has to offer you. I think kids are hungry for that.
— A. B.
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