 |
News Release
Tuesday, October 10, 2006
Contact: Patrick Sullivan, 202-686-2210, ext. 311; psullivan@pcrm.org
Doctors Name Healthiest School Lunches in United States
Schools in California, Florida, New
Mexico, New Jersey, and Georgia Take Top Honors; Vegetarian Items Available Daily on All Menus
WASHINGTON—"Mystery meat" is losing ground to
fruits, vegetables, and low-fat vegetarian meals. It’s National
School Lunch Week, and the Physicians Committee for Responsible
Medicine (PCRM) announces the winners of its 2006 “Golden
Carrot Awards” for innovation in school food service. The
grand prize went to Irmgard James, food service director at Oak
Grove School in Ojai, Calif. Four second-place
prizes went to food
service professionals in Albuquerque, Atlanta, Morristown, N.J.,
and Pinellas County, Fla.
PCRM established the Golden Carrot Awards in 2004 to recognize
food service professionals doing an exceptional job of improving
the healthfulness of school lunches. PCRM looks for programs that
encourage kids to eat lots of fresh fruits and vegetables and that
offer plenty of vegetarian, low-fat, whole grain, and nondairy
options. Children who are raised on a healthy vegetarian diet have
a lower risk of obesity, heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and some
cancers compared with those who grow up on an average American
diet.
This year’s Golden Carrot winners:
- Irmgard James won the grand prize for the creative food service
program she runs at Oak Grove School in Ojai, Calif. James will
win $1,500; the school will receive $3,500. Oak Grove School
serves only vegetarian food, and students enjoy fresh fruit platters
and a salad bar with raw and steamed vegetables.
- Gray Miller, food service director for the Pinellas County
School District in Florida, won a $500 second prize for making
major strides toward improving student health by serving more
vegetarian meals and emphasizing fruits and vegetables.
- Judy Mancici, food service director at the Unity Charter
School in Morristown, N.J., won a $500 second prize. The school
serves only vegetarian meals, and students participate in planting
and harvesting vegetables in the school’s garden.
- JoAnne DeShields, food service director at Grady High School
in Atlanta, won a $500 second prize. Grady High School offers
the “Creations
Line,” an all-vegetarian lunch line featuring such healthy
options as garden burgers, quesadillas with Mexican rice, and
vegetarian spaghetti.
- Laura Gilbert, food service director at Albuquerque Academy
in New Mexico, won a $500 second prize for serving up high-fiber,
low-fat vegetarian entrées such as portabella fajitas
and cheeseless veggie garden pizza.
Read more information about the Golden Carrot winners, or contact
Patrick Sullivan at 202-686-2210, ext. 311, or psullivan@pcrm.org.
Founded in 1985, the Physicians Committee for Responsible
Medicine (PCRM) is a nonprofit organization that promotes preventive
medicine, conducts clinical research, and encourages higher standards
for ethics and effectiveness in research. |
 |