Very excited for the next DC Food Blogger's Happy Hour at Vinoteca! I hope to see you there!Thanks- Thrifty DC Cook
People that came last month!
A Young Journalist Living A Culinary Adventure
Very excited for the next DC Food Blogger's Happy Hour at Vinoteca! I hope to see you there!
One of the exciting things about being in DC is that I am able to get involved with issues like the Child Nutrition Act through Slow Food. Being in the Nation's Capital - I am able to make a difference and help raise awareness. I have always been passionate about food and how it relates to people. Helping others is also important to me...I feel everybody deserves good, clean and fair food. It is time for us to stand up and fight for the good, clean and fair food in our system.
Changing school lunches and helping children with obesity is becoming more of a national concern and more and more people are getting involved to fight in this "Food Revolution." Slow Food USA started The Time for Lunch campaign this past summer. The campaign kicked-up with the National Day of Action that brought 20,000 people together at more than 300 “Eat-Ins” nationwide. It’s time to give young Americans the school lunch they deserve: real food that tastes good and is good for them! Slow Food's goal was to talk to Congress to help make changes. When Congress reauthorizes the National School Lunch program in 2010, Slow Food members are calling on our elected officials to:
Image from Front Page Magazine
A new TV show titled, Food Revolution, premieres March 26th. Jamie Oliver, chef, TV personality and best-selling author, goes to Huntington, West Virginia (which has been called the unhealthiest city in America) and tries to change the way people eat. Jamie is inviting viewers to take a stand and change the way America eats, in our home kitchens, schools and workplaces. ABC's website states, "The impassioned chef is taking on obesity, heart disease and diabetes in the USA, where our nation's children are the first generation NOT expected to live as long as their parents. Now that's scary!" He hopes to help get Huntington off that list and start a chain reaction of positive change across the country.
Photo: Chicago school lunch: Corn chips with cheese sauce, French fries, ketchup, pears in syrup, & chocolate milk (Source: American Lunchroom: What Our Kids Are Eating at School: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly)
Interesting article in NYT talks about how it has been nine months after effectively banning most fund-raising food sales in city schools and how a city panel will vote Wednesday on an amended regulation that will allow student groups to sell items like Pop-Tarts and Doritos during the school day, but not brownies, zucchini bread or anything else homemade. This idea to me is upsetting. Our children do not need to eat processed food filled with junk and preservatives, instead they should indulge in homemade treats and healthier snacks.
Currently it is the 2010 Winter Olympics. I am enjoying watching the events and footage of Vancouver; however, it is making me miss OITF and my time on tour. Vancouver was on of my favorite cities we went to across the country and Canada. It is a beautiful place to visit with amazing restaurants and outdoor activities. (I even hiked "The Grind" Grouse Mountain where the Today's show is being aired.)






Tonight I am going to the Washington Post to hear from some of DC's most talented gastronomically inclined authors at the reading from the new bestseller "Best Food Writing 2009." The event will include Joe Yonan and Jane Black of The Washington Post, Tim Carman of the Washington City Paper, and cookbook author Monica Bhide, all of whom are featured in this anthology of culinary prose, along with the series editor, Holly Hughes.
Click here for more details...Hope to see you there!