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What's for Breakfast at School Today: 13 Teaspoons of Sugar

by: euclidarms

Thu Feb 04, 2010 at 03:01:16 AM PST


(FYI, we're supposed to eat only 10 teaspoons of sugar PER DAY!!!! - promoted by Jill Richardson)

By Ed Bruske
aka The Slow Cook

Yesterday I stopped by the cafeteria at my daughter's school here in the District of Columbia--H.D. Cooke Elementary--and this is what many of the kids were having for breakfast: A package of sugar-glazed cookies called Kellogg's Crunchmania Cinnamon buns; chocolate- or strawberry-flavored milk; grape juice.

A 1.76-ounce packet of Crunchmania contains 13 grams of sugar, or 3 tespoons. Chocolate milk packs 26 grams of sugar, somewhat more than 6 teaspoons. And the grape juice delivers 18 grams of sugar in a little four-ounce container, another four-plus teaspoons. Altogether, that's more than 13 teaspoons of nutritionally worthless sugar first thing in the morning, courtesy of the public school system and its food service provider, Chartwells.

euclidarms :: What's for Breakfast at School Today: 13 Teaspoons of Sugar
I came across one boy actually dipping the cookies into his chocolate milk. All further proof that you can pack school "foods" with "nutrition" at the factory, and still come up with products that have no business being served to children on a daily basis at school, especially in a city that has the highest concentration of adolescent obesity in the country.

As Marlene Schwartz, deputy director of the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University. was recently quoted here as saying, children have only a few "discretionary calories" to spend on sugary food. "So, my professional feeling is that discretionary calories (added sugar, fat) should be eaten at home, not at school.  I am in favor of schools focusing on providing key nutrients to children at school and not getting into the business of providing them with 'treats.' "

Perhaps equally as interesting are the other ingredients in this industrially processed melange. Kellogg's lists these as the contents of Crunchmania Cinnamon Bun. Notice the trans-fats (less than .5 grams per serving):

Enriched flour, sugar, whole wheat (graham) flour, vegetable oil (partially hydrogenated soybean, cottonseed and hydrogenated cottonseed oil with TBHQ and citric acid for freshness), high fructose corn syrup, contains two percent or less of salt, calcium carbonate, natural and artificial flavors (contain milk), baking soda, soy lecithin, propylene glycol alginate, corn starch, and added B vitamins.

Sound good to you?

The chocolate milk from Cloverland Dairy in Baltimore also has more ingredients that you might think: fat-free milk, high-fructose corn syrup, cocoa (processed with alkali), salt, carrageenan, artificial flavor (vanillin), plus vitamins A and B.

The grape juice is 100 percent juice. But the level of sugar in grape juice is actually 50 percent higher, ounce-for-ounce, than in Coca-Cola. And while fruit juice may sound healthful, the sugar comes in the form of fructose, which is metabolized somewhat differently than other sugars in that it goes straight to the liver. Fructose has been implicated in a surge of fatty liver disease, as well as in metabolic disorders such as obesity and diabetes.

Couldn't they just give the kids some actual grapes? Unfortunately, that would probably cost quite a bit more.

I hope First Lady Michelle Obama is taking all this in as she prepares to unveil on Tuesday her campaign against childood obesity. We don't have to plant a garden or shop at a farmers market to eat more healthfully. We can start by eliminating the culture of sugar in public schools and feeding kids real food.

This would be a good place to begin as well in the "Healthy Schools" bill pending before the D.C. Council. Like the regulations for federally reimbusable school meals formulated by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the "Healthy Schools" legislation places no limit on the amount of sugar that can be served with school meals, and contains specific exemptions for flavored milk and fruit juice in proposed standards that otherwise regulate the amount of sugar that individual food items may contain.

The First Lady could also tell her husband President Obama that school lunches need more than the piddlin' amount he recently proposed in his new budget.

You can have your say about school food next Wednesday, Feb. 10, when "Healthy Schools" comes up for a hearing in the D.C. Council. That's at 10 a.m. in room 412 of the John A. Wilson Building, 1350 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. You can sign up to testify by e-mail here: ABenjamin@DCCOUNCIL.US

Tags: , , , , (All Tags)
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These reports are shocking (4.00 / 3)
I had no idea that the food being served at schools was so unhealthy!

13 spoonfuls of sugar (4.00 / 3)
help the breakfast go down?

</bad joke>

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman


Breakfast helps (4.00 / 2)
13 spoonfuls of sugar go down. It's a marketing gimmick - eat it, its breakfast!

[ Parent ]
The cookie (4.00 / 2)
The argument for flavored milk is, Mountain Dew would be OK if it were dosed with calcium and Vitamin D. What is the analogous argument for topping the cookie with sugar? If the cookie were not sugar-glazed, would children not eat it? And if they didn't eat the cookies, what vital nutrient would they be missing?

I wouldn't complain about sugar in the cookie itself. Cookies contain sugar, that's life. Why sugar-coat it? Is the cookie without the sugar-coating really so vile that kids wouldn't eat it?


Flavored milk (4.00 / 2)
Ed, have you tasted those Cloverland flavored milks? If not, I wouldn't ordinarily ask you to do it, but you should in the spirit of comprehensive research.

Cloverland "chocolate" sugar milk and Cloverland "strawberry" sugar milk taste nasty, in my opinion. They don't taste like chocolate or strawberry, they're merely colored brown and (with beet juice) pink.

Granted, I don't have a 13-year-old's palate, and I acknowledge that some children don't like real milk. I think, though, that Secretary Vilsack is plain insane when he insists that children in general won't drink milk unless it is amped with beaucoup sugar. Where's the supportable research that proves the contention? I agree that when given a free choice, many children will choose sugar milk. (Let's stop calling it "chocolate" milk, OK?) If sugar milk is absent from the lineup, and a child doesn't drink milk because of that absence, no problem - give her a tablet containing 300 mg of calcium citrate.


milkfat (4.00 / 2)
Ed, just curious, minor detail - what is the milkfat content of each of the Cloverland sugar milks?

Also, have you tasted Coverland uncolored whole milk? It's pretty good stuff.


[ Parent ]
I am still reeling, (4.00 / 2)
after all this time, from the news that Vilsack claims to love brown sugar milk. Gack.

[ Parent ]
Does he really? (4.00 / 2)
Or does he just not want to become the target of a multimillion dollar attack campaign from corporate interests?

Ah, American Politics!

"Intelligent discontent is the mainspring of civilization." - Eugene V. Debs


[ Parent ]
Attack ad... (4.00 / 3)
Tom Vilsack recently failed to profess his love of chocolate milk.

(cue Tom Vilsack's face morphing into Osama bin Laden's...)

Call your legislators today, and ask them if they support a man who hates America.

(cut to waving American flag)

Got Patriotism?



"Intelligent discontent is the mainspring of civilization." - Eugene V. Debs

[ Parent ]
Disclosure (4.00 / 2)
Why shouldn't any new legislation require maximum practical disclosure? I'm not intending "maximum practical" to have a legal connotation, I just mean that some exceptions might reasonably be made in some circumstances, and new legislation or regulations should be implemented reasonably. But obviously, companies such as Chartwells or Aramark have ingredient lists and nutrition panels for every meal component. Shouldn't that be available on the internet or at district headquarters for every school district to which the company supplies food? Wouldn't mean that they would accurately reflect meals - consider the case of a cook who willy-nilly mixes cheese into everything.

I don't know what ideal disclosure regulations or legislation would look like, but clearly, improvement over the current status of things is eminently practical.


Ancient history (4.00 / 2)
To provide temporal context, I'll tell you our kids were born in 1973 and 1976. My wife and I weren't health nuts, not particularly concerned about which foods were more healthful than others, but I don't recall that we ever had sugar milk in the house. It wasn't a problem, it wasn't an issue. When we went grocery shopping, we didn't hesitate at the dairy case, hemming and hawing about whether to buy real milk or sugar milk, we automatically got the white stuff.

How have our professional bureaucrats gone so wrong?

Our kids might very well have drunk sugar milk in school. I'll ask them. We didn't even discuss it at home, though.

The dairy industry is missing one last bet, judging by the success of the sugar milk and sugar yogurt campaigns. Can we expect marketing campaigns for brown and pink sugar cottage cheese, brown and pink sugar ricotta cheese?


I did... (4.00 / 2)
I never really liked milk much either way.  For that matter, I haven't bought milk for drinking once in my adult life.  Only time I ever use it is half & half in my coffee, or heavy cream in sauces.

I do remember drinking 'chocolate' (sugar!) milk up until about 7th grade, though.  Can't name the supplier for sure, but since it was in various North Jersey public schools it was probably Tuscan Dairies, based out of Union, New Jersey.  Or maybe Farmland Dairies, out of Fair Lawn, NJ.  Must have been one of those two.

They're both local / regional MegaDairies, but one of them (I think Farmland) shocked me on my last trip back to Jersey, when I stopped for breakfast at a bagel place and saw that they're now proudly and boldly advertising their products right on the carton as rBGH/rBST-free.

Anyways.

I'm pretty sure we had the option of either 'chocolate', 'skim' or whole.  My mother let me pick whatever, and I remember I always went with 'chocolate'.

Born in 1979, and my parents weren't much interested in food either way themselves.  But yeah, I don't ever remember once seeing 'sugar milk' in their fridge at home any time, either.

"Intelligent discontent is the mainspring of civilization." - Eugene V. Debs


[ Parent ]
Just horrifying... (4.00 / 2)
Yesterday I stopped by the cafeteria at my daughter's school here in the District of Columbia--H.D. Cooke Elementary--and this is what many of the kids were having for breakfast: A package of sugar-glazed cookies called Kellogg's Crunchmania Cinnamon buns; chocolate- or strawberry-flavored milk; grape juice.

A 1.76-ounce packet of Crunchmania contains 13 grams of sugar, or 3 tespoons. Chocolate milk packs 26 grams of sugar, somewhat more than 6 teaspoons. And the grape juice delivers 18 grams of sugar in a little four-ounce container, another four-plus teaspoons. Altogether, that's more than 13 teaspoons of nutritionally worthless sugar first thing in the morning, courtesy of the public school system and its food service provider, Chartwells.

This is simply a recipe for nutritional disaster! Are we trying to make our kids unhealthy? Make them obese? Give them diabetes as early as possible?

I'm horrified... And I'm starting to think I need to take a closer look at CCSD to see how my nieces and nephews are eating there.

Act on Principles and make equality happen.


Just a thought (4.00 / 2)
Dr. Kellogg would CRY if he found out that his name was being used on such a product.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

His brother's name. (4.00 / 1)
Tiny clarification for those who haven't yet read "Eating History."

[ Parent ]
A fun thing to do with foreign houseguests (4.00 / 1)
is take them to the cereal aisle of a big supermarket and watch their eyes pop out! "You feed your kids WHAT for breakfast?" They frequently buy a box of, say, Double Chocolate Cookie Crisps or Disney Princess Cereal to take home and show the unbelievers...

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