PDA

View Full Version : Congress Reaps Pizza Harvest



Seshmeister
11-16-2011, 09:36 AM
Pizza is a vegetable? Congress says yes
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45306416/ns/today-today_health/t/pizza-vegetable-congress-says-yes/#.TsPJTUP_m0s


http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6098/6348440383_f0d2191b9e.jpg


By MARY CLARE JALONICK

updated 11/15/2011 12:27:08 PM ET


WASHINGTON — Congress wants to keep pizza and french fries on school lunch lines, fighting back against an Obama administration proposal to make school lunches healthier.

The final version of a spending bill released late Monday would unravel school lunch standards the Agriculture Department proposed earlier this year, which included limiting the use of potatoes on the lunch line and delaying limits on sodium and delaying a requirement to boost whole grains.

The bill also would allow tomato paste on pizzas to be counted as a vegetable, as it is now. USDA had wanted to prevent that.

Food companies that produce frozen pizzas for schools, the salt industry and potato growers requested the changes, and some conservatives in Congress say the federal government shouldn't be telling children what to eat.

Republicans on the House Appropriations Committee said the changes would "prevent overly burdensome and costly regulations and to provide greater flexibility for local school districts to improve the nutritional quality of meals."

School districts had said some of the USDA requirements went too far and cost too much when budgets are extremely tight. Schools have long taken broad instructions from the government on what they can serve in federally subsidized meals that are served free or at reduced price to low-income children. But some schools have balked at government attempts to tell them exactly what foods they can't serve.

Reacting to that criticism, House Republicans had urged USDA to completely rewrite the standards in their version of the bill passed in June. The Senate last month voted to block the potato limits in their version. Neither version included the language on tomato paste, sodium or whole grains, which was added by House-Senate negotiators on the bill.
The school lunch proposal was based on 2009 recommendations by the Institute of Medicine, the health arm of the National Academy of Sciences. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said they were needed to reduce childhood obesity and future health care costs.
Nutrition advocate Margo Wootan of the Center for Science in the Public Interest said Congress's proposed changes will keep schools from serving a wider array of vegetables. Children already get enough pizza and potatoes, she says. It would also slow efforts to make pizzas — a longtime standby on school lunch lines — healthier, with whole grain crusts and lower levels of sodium.

"They are making sure that two of the biggest problems in the school lunch program, pizza and french fries, are untouched," she said.

A group of retired generals advocating for healthier school lunches also criticized the spending bill. The group, called Mission: Readiness has called poor nutrition in school lunches a national security issue because obesity is the leading medical disqualifier for military service.

"We are outraged that Congress is seriously considering language that would effectively categorize pizza as a vegetable in the school lunch program," Amy Dawson Taggart, the director of the group, said in a letter to members of Congress before the final plan was released. "It doesn't take an advanced degree in nutrition to call this a national disgrace."

Specifically, the provisions would:

Block the Agriculture Department from limiting starchy vegetables, including corn and peas, to two servings a week. The rule was intended to cut down on french fries, which some schools serve daily.

Allow USDA to count two tablespoons of tomato paste as a vegetable, as it does now. The department had attempted to require that only a half-cup of tomato paste could be considered a vegetable — too much to put on a pizza. Federally subsidized lunches must have a certain number of vegetables to be served.

Require further study on long-term sodium reduction requirements set forth by the USDA guidelines.

Require USDA to define "whole grains" before they regulate them. The rules would require schools to use more whole grains.

Food companies who have fought the USDA standards say they were too strict and neglected the nutrients that potatoes, other starchy vegetables and tomato paste do offer.

"This agreement ensures that nutrient-rich vegetables such as potatoes, corn and peas will remain part of a balanced, healthy diet in federally funded school meals and recognizes the significant amounts of potassium, fiber and vitamins A and C provided by tomato paste, ensuring that students may continue to enjoy healthy meals such as pizza and pasta," said Kraig Naasz, president of the American Frozen Food Institute.

The school lunch provisions are part of a final House-Senate compromise on a $182 billion measure would fund the day-to-day operations of the departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Justice, Transportation and Housing and Urban Development. Both the House and the Senate are expected to vote on the bill this week and send it to President Barack Obama.

ThrillsNSpills
11-16-2011, 10:00 AM
Just put it all in a feedbag called Monsanto-chow and strap it on the masses. we need to get the kids to eat more genetically modified irradiated grub for Cretins.

Ketchup's a vegetable too. It's got tomatoes in it.
probably cube-shaped ones.

hambon4lif
11-16-2011, 10:12 AM
Congress itself is made of many vegetables....

FORD
11-16-2011, 11:15 AM
Reagan would be proud of them.

Did Herman Cain get a contract out of this?

Nitro Express
11-16-2011, 12:11 PM
Does it have to be a veggie pizza to count?

FORD
11-16-2011, 12:48 PM
Pizza can be nutritious, if it's made right. Used to be this place locally called Jo Mama's. Literally founded by hippie Evergreen graduates in the early 70's. They set the place up in this old house. Made their pizza with whole grain crust, and their best pie, called the "Leaning Tower" was loaded up with all the usual pizza type meats, and enough veggies to run a salad bar. It was literally a complete well balanced meal, and you couldn't eat more than two slices of this thing. Goddamn, I miss that place. The owners decided to go into politics and got out of the business unfortunately. Nothing else around here compares to it.

Of course that ain't what they're serving for school lunches......

http://30.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lagy14SPho1qau41to1_400.jpg

I remember school pizza. Rectangular white crusts with grease dripping off of it. I used to roll it up and eat it like a burrito. Probably not much nutrition in that stuff at all, though admittedly I liked it enough at the time. Of course I was usually stoned back then too. And I'm sure the current version probably has fake cheese and high fructose corn poison in the sauce.

Nitro Express
11-16-2011, 08:27 PM
Really pizza is not that different than a pasta dish. The crust is the carbohydrate, then you have a tomato based sauce and cheese. For a bonus you might have a protein of some kind. Sausage or ham. Maybe add some veggies of some kind. Really the only thing bad about pizza is people tend to eat too much like everything else. Stick with one slice and one bottle of beer and you are ok. Add in a salad and really not a bad meal.

FORD
11-19-2011, 02:30 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86-1ZhUCSoU