Since last year, students at Raymond Elementary School (RES) have had the opportunity to experiment in the kitchen, whipping up some healthy snacks as part of the after school cooking club led by chef and School Nutrition and Wellness Coordinator for RSU14 Samantha Cowens-Gasbarro and RES kitchen manager Kim Williams.
The
overall plan is to offer the cooking club experience at every school in the district
said Cowens-Gasbarro. An unanticipated response to the club kept the program at
RES all of last year, with over 80 children signing up in response to a listserve
announcement. The club is a free after school activity which runs for an hour
and a half each Tuesday for four weeks. Sessions are run at the school until
each child who signs up has had a chance to participate.
Cowens-Gasbarro
needed to cancel the last session of last year due to her maternity leave, so
she picked up where they left off at RES, allowing the children who had missed
that final session a chance to be involved. When this session is over, they
will move on to Jordan-Small Middle School, and then into Windham, beginning
with Manchester School.
The
club began as an initiative by the nutrition department. They quickly realized
that it was so successful they needed some outside support, said
Cowens-Gasbarro. They applied for and received a $3,500 grant from Berlin Auto
Group to sustain the program. While the club doesn’t cost too much to operate, the
grant provided them the opportunity to purchase some equipment, such as mixers,
as well as supporting each session.
The
club allows children to try their hand at making a variety of healthy recipes,
such as homemade granola bars, fruit dip, chicken tortilla soup, mozzarella
sticks, and healthy cookies. “I’ve had them eating vegan banana oatmeal cookies
and they really love it. When you get kids making it, they want to eat it. They
want to try it,” said Cowens-Gasbarro.
Running
a cooking club is natural for Cowens-Gasbarro, who helped to run a cooking
school for children while she was a personal chef in the Boston area. “With all
the school nutrition stuff that was so foreign, this was the old shoe that felt
good,” she said with a laugh.
One
great outcome of the program, she said, has been the close relationship that
the children have developed with the kitchen staff, and the positive
connections they have made to school nutrition. Parents have also learned more
about what the school nutrition department is doing, and the initiatives they
have to get kids interested in and excited about trying new things.
The
kitchen staff at the schools is willing and excited to step up and do the extra
work that comes with trying to make food fun, said Cowens-Gasbarro. One example
of this is the enthusiasm with which they participate in occasional themed Fun
Friday Breakfasts. “They are just so happy to do it, and so excited when their
counts go up. They’re just great,” said Cowens-Gasbarro.
Breakfast
has been an area of focus for the nutrition department to be sure all kids are
getting a nutritious meal to start their day. In addition to the theme
breakfasts, a breakfast cart was started in the Windham Middle School Field
Allen building for the sixth graders. This allows kids a second chance to grab
something to eat if they missed the cafeteria in the morning. The program has
been so successful that they are expanding it to the rest of Windham Middle
School, said Cowens-Gasbarro.
“It’s been really great to get out
and see the kids,” said Cowens-Gasbarro. “We want to promote and tell kids what
wonderful things we’re doing so that stigma of school lunch is slowly fading
into the distance,” she added.
To
follow all the fun the cooking club is having, visit
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Windham-Raymond-School-Nutrition-Program/408394675849951
Trail Mix Krispie Cups
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
1/2 cup packed light brown sugar
4 tablespoons honey
2 cups rice cereal, such as Rice
Krispies
2 tablespoons sunflower seeds
1/4 cup dried cranberries or raisins
1/4 cup thin pretzel sticks
1/4 cup mini chocolate chips
1. In a medium saucepan, combine the
brown sugar with the honey and butter. Bring the mixture to a boil over
medium-high heat, then lower the heat to medium-low and simmer until the sugar
dissolves, about 2 minutes. Remove the saucepan from the heat.
2. Add the sunflower seeds, rice cereal,
raisins and pretzels to the saucepan and fold the ingredients to evenly coat
with the sauce. Place paper liners in a
standard 12 cup muffin time. Scoop mixture into muffin cups, dividing mixture
evenly and gently pressing down with the back of a spoon to pack mixture into
cups. Gently press the chocolate chips
onto the top of each of the trail mix cups.
Let the granola mixture set in the refrigerator until firm, about 15
minutes, then peel off paper liners and enjoy!
Asian
Noodle Salad
1
lb Linguine Noodles, Cooked, Rinsed, And Cooled
1
whole Red Bell Pepper, Sliced Thin
1
whole Green Bell Pepper, Sliced Thin
1
cup snow peas, sliced
1
cup grated carrot
¼
cup cilantro, chopped
FOR
THE DRESSING:
1
whole Lime, Juiced
8
Tablespoons Soy Sauce
2-3
Tablespoons Sesame Oil
1/3
cup Brown Sugar
3
Tablespoons Fresh Ginger Chopped
1
cloves Garlic, Chopped
Mix
salad ingredients together. Whisk dressing ingredients together and pour over
salad. Mix with tongs or hands and serve on a platter.
Banana
Ice Cream
Makes
1 cup
Ingredients
1
large ripe banana
Start
with ripe bananas: They should be sweet and soft. Peel the bananas and cut them
into pieces.
Put
the bananas in an airtight container: Like a freezer-safe glass bowl, or you
can use a freezer bag.
Freeze
the banana pieces for at least 2 hours, but ideally overnight.
Blend
the frozen banana pieces in a small food processor: Pulse the frozen banana
pieces.
Blend
until smooth and whipped.
Once
whipped, add any mix-ins, like peanut butter or chocolate chips
Transfer
to an airtight container and freeze until solid: You can eat the ice cream
immediately, but it will be quite soft. You can also transfer it back into the
airtight container and freeze it until solid, like traditional ice cream.
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