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Parents Forum, Parenting Community, Pregnancy Forums, & Parenting Resources
02-16-2012, 10:01 AM
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#11
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PF Fiend
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: England and somewhere else
Posts: 671
Children: Boys 9 and 4
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Re: Food Police
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeremy+3
Or you get the children with cheese sandwich, bag of crisps, biscuit and a bottle of pop, here we come type 2 diabetes!
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Tesco's meal deal for 2.50 i guess
It is very sad that decent food these days is really *expensive*
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02-16-2012, 11:35 AM
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#12
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Iowa
Posts: 3,274
Children: Boy Cole 12 girl 10 Chloe
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Re: Food Police
we could pack ribeye steaks. The kids only eat the snacks out of their lunch most day's
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02-16-2012, 03:10 PM
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#13
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PF Addict
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Nottinghamshire
Posts: 1,536
Children: Jackson 20, Amelia 15, Jake 6, Jade 5 and Olivia 3.
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Re: Food Police
Quote:
Originally Posted by TabascoNatalie
Tesco's meal deal for 2.50 i guess
It is very sad that decent food these days is really *expensive*
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Yeah, so many parents, poor but eat at KFC...nice logic they're using! Hey, Tesco's can get even cheaper now they rely on government slaves to work for free!
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02-17-2012, 05:47 AM
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#14
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PF Fiend
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Eastern North Carolina, USA
Posts: 653
Children: Jessica 21, Adam 20, Jonothan 19, Sean 17, Katherine 15, Andrew 14
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Re: Food Police
Chicken nuggets and patties are made from mechanically separated chicken is what you get when you grind an entire chicken through a sieve, soak it in ammonia, and add artificial flavor. Thats just gross. I'm not saying you shouldn't eat it, but we don't.
We buy organic, farm raised when we can and eat frozen veggies not canned. We try to find only hormone free food. What we put in our mouth is pretty important in our family. I would be livid if the school decided to fed my children and then have the audacity to charge me for it. Again.. gross.
That being said, they can choose if they want to buy the nasty stuff if they'd rather. It doesn't happen very often. Pizza days are the exception.
NBC news reports that the FDA allows for a percentage of "Food Defect Action Levels: Levels of Natural or Unavoidable Defects in Foods That Present No Health Hazards for Humans," says that filth is "objectionable matter contributed by insects, rodents, and birds; decomposed material; and miscellaneous matter such as sand, soil, glass, rust, or other foreign substances."
I guess we should all feel lucky the powers that be are looking out for our best interest.
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02-17-2012, 01:04 PM
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#15
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Iowa
Posts: 4,068
Children: 2 boys - 10yo and 5yo
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Re: Food Police
I mean, I understand that if a completely substandard lunch was sent, that someone might counsel the parent on nutrition, but substituting a fried chicken product what seems like a perfectly decent sandwich seems ridiculous.
How about the USAD worry about the lunches they oversee and let parents provide our own where we see fit. It's crap like this that makes me want to ditch the whole system and start over.
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02-17-2012, 02:00 PM
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#16
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PF Addict
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Iowa
Posts: 1,083
Children: Elliott - 6, Cara - 4.5
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Re: Food Police
Well, sorry, I guess I jumped the gun with that one. Turns out the facts arent quite what was posted with that one...
http://www.balloon-juice.com/2012/02...h-thats-bogus/
But it still raises some interesting questions as to parents rights in public schools and public programs.
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02-17-2012, 05:30 PM
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#17
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PF Fiend
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 550
Children: 5 year old girl
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Re: Food Police
Quote:
Originally Posted by TabascoNatalie
It is very sad that decent food these days is really *expensive*
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It is really bad when an apple costs more than a candy bar or a bag of chips, and milk or orange juice cost more than a soft drink.
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02-18-2012, 03:30 AM
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#18
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PF Fiend
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Eastern North Carolina, USA
Posts: 653
Children: Jessica 21, Adam 20, Jonothan 19, Sean 17, Katherine 15, Andrew 14
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Re: Food Police
It is a shame that healthy food cost more. A few years ago we started our our garden. Its about 4x times the size it was now. Last year we added our our chicken coop for eggs and bought our own pigs. For us, it wasn't about the money as much as it was that most foods are filled with hormones that I don't particularly want my kids digesting and the fact I hate the thought of our meat coming from animals raised in small inhumane places. This last part, the actual harvesting of meat, was quite a experience for us all.  Knowing what I put on our plates make it worth it.
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02-18-2012, 05:39 AM
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#19
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PF Addict
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Nottinghamshire
Posts: 1,536
Children: Jackson 20, Amelia 15, Jake 6, Jade 5 and Olivia 3.
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Re: Food Police
Quote:
Originally Posted by MomoJA
It is really bad when an apple costs more than a candy bar or a bag of chips, and milk or orange juice cost more than a soft drink.
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There not actually more expensive in the UK, it is just used an excuse here by mainly ignorant people, if we were to feed our family on processed food, ready meals etc it would cost probably 1/3 more than we actually spend on our food. There is also the fact that some people don't actually know how to cook or think they don't have time to cook for their family, but they have time to watch tv, spend time on computers etc.
If you want a ready meal it is £2/£3 per meal, so if we were all to have a £2 ready meal that would be £14 for one meal and ready meals are small as well, so it probably wouldn't feed us, that is a lot of money for a meal, with meat we spend typically about £7-9 per meal for the family.
Or if you look at things like McDonald's I'm not sure how much they cost elsewhere, here an adults medium meal is £4.19 and a happy meal is £2.29, so that would be four adult meals for us and three children's meals which would be just over £23.
When you can get a whole stew pack, carrots, onion, parsnips and swede for £1 then all you need is some stock and a cheap cut of meat, shove it in one saucepan and leave it for a few hours and its done. The only expensive fresh food is out of season fruit, but there are always so many things in season that you don't need to buy out of season stuff.
Last edited by Jeremy+3; 02-18-2012 at 05:50 AM..
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02-18-2012, 05:45 AM
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#20
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PF Addict
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Nottinghamshire
Posts: 1,536
Children: Jackson 20, Amelia 15, Jake 6, Jade 5 and Olivia 3.
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Re: Food Police
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mom2all
It is a shame that healthy food cost more. A few years ago we started our our garden. Its about 4x times the size it was now. Last year we added our our chicken coop for eggs and bought our own pigs. For us, it wasn't about the money as much as it was that most foods are filled with hormones that I don't particularly want my kids digesting and the fact I hate the thought of our meat coming from animals raised in small inhumane places. This last part, the actual harvesting of meat, was quite a experience for us all.  Knowing what I put on our plates make it worth it.
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Food standards are very different aren't they, in the UK the practices of your country wouldn't be allowed, but I'm guessing a few of ours wouldn't be allowed over there either.
Here animals aren't given hormones and if they are ill and need any form of medication there must be at least 30 days between the medication being stopped and the animal slaughtered, hormones and medications cannot be added to food either, nor can a vegetarian animal be given animal products as feed.
Things can be bad, but they are better here than some places, a company tried to build essentially a cow factory, they would always be inside and basically constantly milked but it was not allowed, not only due to the suffering of the animals, but also as having so many animals in such a small place would be a danger to human health as well, so workers would be in appalling conditions.
Very few supermarkets here stock non-free range eggs and battery hens are being completely banned here (I'm not sure if it is EU wide or not) and most brands e.g. hellmans mayonnaise use free range eggs as well.
It is quite interesting how farming practices differ so much between developed countries, one thing that happens here is non-free range chicken breasts in supermarkets are soaked in water to increase their size and therefore increase the price the supermarket can charge for them.
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