Monday, April 26, 2010

The Bottom Line

Cooking Co-Op makes natural foods, as opposed to processed foods, affordably available to the average person. Case in point. Remember a few weeks ago, I picked up a fast food fried chicken dinner for my 6 foot tall 14 year old son- $14.48. Well, this week I fixed him oven fried chicken and he said thank you! So the 3 of us had oven fried chicken, Trader Joe's yummy vegetable fried rice and a salad for the same cost. Cheaper and better quality- and we have some left overs. Win, win, win! The ball is in your court.

Monday, April 19, 2010

School Cafeteria Food- Worse Than I Thought

I spoke with a veteran school cafeteria employee. What Jamie Oliver described at the school cafeteria in Huntington, WVA is also true right here in Richmond! The school board made the decision to switch suppliers to save money- new supplier brings in even more processed food. She shared how they serve lots of pizza, chicken nuggets, fried foods, breaded foods. When I asked about salads, the teachers get most of the salads- not a lot of demand from the kids for salads. She said some of the hotdogs look green and she would not touch them! Friday is her favorite day as there are fewer items to prepare. I asked her wouldn't it make more sense to put higher quality in the food and have less choice? Remember GM went bankrupt having too many models. But then there is bureaucracy. We can put a man on the moon but we can't figure out healthier meals in the school? When I grew up, there was no choice- what you see is what you get. When you go to someone's home for dinner, you eat what is served. The importance of cooking co-op is to help you avoid the fast food lane- our kids already get too much processed food at school! Driving schools often show gruesome crashes to encourage safety. Parents and children alike need to see gruesome clogged arteries and other health problems that have resulted from poor eating habits. So check out the home page of my web site and come to my talks on "Food Revolution- Cooking Co-Op Style." We can do better!

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

The Gift

Monday, April 12th marked my 30th year of marriage. What a trip and what a blessing! So as I thought of what gift I could give my husband and having blogged about a food revolution(change), I gave him a membership to a 10 week program run by a Health Institute here in Richmond. He has been an avid runner since college. This health institute will work with him in helping him live an even healthier lifestyle concerning food and excercise. I sure hope so because I would like for him to be around another 30 years. So my co-op cooking will need to adapt to a new program- not a problem. I lost 10 lbs. on a nationally recognized weight-loss plan and used co-op cooking to help. Becky Tirabassi in her Change Your Life newsletter talks about the need to have..." courage to change the areas of our lives that are stagnant." And if we..."need something to excite us...start doing something that is healthy." Spring is here, flowers and plants are growing, not stagnating. Start a new journey with me. I will be teaching classes in May and June here in the Richmond area- more to follow.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Don't Stop Believing...Hold On To That Feeling...

I grew up in Chapel Hill, NC - home of the North Carolina Tarheels - March Madness and college basketball are big events! And last nights championship game was spectacular with Duke narrowly defeating the underdog Butler. Both teams exhibited what hours and hours of detailed practice can produce. But how many of those players would have spent the same hours of practice without being part of a team and having a coach that pre-planned the practice time often minute by minute? Samuel Johnson in the 1700's talked about private duties( activities done without anybody watching- duties such as cooking). The reason I am encouraging you to try something new to get dinner on the table is because I have found that unless I am on a cooking team, holding me accountable to dinner delivery, I don't shop and plan my meals. True confession- this week as I took a week off my cooking co-op routine I ended up buying fried chicken, biscuits and french fries for my begging 14 year old, 6 ft. basketball player to the tune of $14.48 - that was an air ball! Take a risk and try something new- the adventure of working together as a family and with friends to put a special ,healthier and more affordable dinner on the table. You've got to believe you can be #1- envision the feeling of a less stressful mealtime!