Title: Fresh
1 Fresh Delicious Nutrition Standards in the
National School Lunch and Breakfast
ProgramsGrains
- Cheri White MS, SNS
- Administrator
- BNPS, NH Department of Education
- October 3, 2012
2Healthy Hunger Free Kids Act (HHFKA)-2010
Nutrition Standards in the NSLP and SBP Programs
- historic legislation updating the nutrition
standards in the NSLP SBP for the first time in
15 years - rule aligns science based evidence from the 2010
DGAs and the 2009 Institute of Medicine (IOM)
report - proposed rule 133,268 comments
- final rule published in January, 2012
- implementation began July 1, 2o12
3The New Meal Patterns
- Designed to improve nutrient density by
- limiting calories
- serving more fruits, vegetables, legumes and
whole grains - serving lean meats
- limiting sodium saturated fat
- requiring trans fat to be zero grams (lt0.5 g)
- serving only low fat (unflavored 1 or skim) and
fat free milk (required in both SBP NSLP in
2012)
4 The Meal PatternsDaily Weekly
Requirements
5 Implementation Time Line
6Summary of Changes for the New Meal Patterns
- a single food based menu planning system for the
SBP NSLP - majority of changes begin in the NSLP in SY
2012-13 - SBP in SY 2013-14
- Grade Groups (K-5), (6-8), (9-12)
7Summary of Changes for the New Meal Patterns
- serving sizes of fruits and vegetables are
increased vegetable variety required - milk, fruits, and vegetables have no maximum
serving amounts - grains, m/ma, calories have minimum and maximum
requirements - students must select ½ c of fruit and/or
vegetable for a reimbursable lunch in SY 2012-13
8Challenges for Implementation
- increased costs for whole grains, fruits and
vegetables - decreased student acceptability of new foods
- limits on calories, servings of grains and
meat/meat alternates - limited availability for low sodium foods
- recipes bid specs will need revisions
- training needed in marketing, nutrition, food
preparation and recipe execution - nutrition education to support changes
9Benefits Outweigh Challenges
- all schools will operate under the same single
food based menu system - simplification for training, compliance and
product formulation - improved nutrient quality of food
- alignment with the 2010 dietary guidelines for
disease prevention - the meal patterns serve as teaching tools for
nutritious meals - the new nutrition requirements will drive
beneficial product changes in all markets for all
people
10Create Smarter LunchroomsFood is not nutritious
until it is eaten!
- make the food delicious
- make the food beautiful
- make the food nutritious
- change the way school meals market and serve
fruits, vegetables grains - make the healthy choice the easy choice
- offer taste tests and samples
- increase variety
11Whole Grains
- a whole grain keeps all of the nutrient rich
components of the grain seed intact -
- 50 of grains offered weekly must be whole grain
beginning - 2012-13 for the NSLP
- 2013-14 for the SBP
- Note the rest of the grains must be enriched
- 100 whole grains for both in 2014-15
12Identifying Whole Grain Rich Products
- A Grain Product will be identified using the two
below elements - Element 1 A serving of the food item must meet
portion size requirements for the grain/breads
component as defined in FNS guidance. - Element 2 The food must meet at least one of
the following - a. The whole grain per serving must be gt 8
grams. (Found on product packaging from
manufacturer.) - b. The product has on it Diets rich in whole
grain foods and other plant foods and low in
total fat, saturated fat and cholesterol may
reduce the risk of heart disease and some
cancers. - c. Product ingredient listing lists whole grain
first. - d. Non-mixed dishes (ex. Breads, cereals) Whole
grains must be the primary ingredient by weight
(whole grain is the first ingredient on the
list). - e. Mixed dishes (ex. Pizza, corn dogs) Whole
grains must be the primary grain ingredient by
weight (a whole grain is the first ingredient on
the list).
13Grains in the Food Buying Guide
- Exhibit A in the Food Buying Guide has changed.
Please see memo SP 30-2012. - Can use Exhibit A instead of calculating the
actual amount of grains in a product. The list
of product does not include everything, but it is
written general enough so that most things can
fit into a category.
14Whole Grain Calculation
- If you do not want to use or cannot use the
Exhibit A, then you can do a calculation to
credit grains in a product. - 4 options
- Please note that the last 2 options will be the
only options a SAU or manufacturer can use after
school year 2012-2013. -
15Option 1
- For this school year (2012-2013) only
- Using the 1997 version of the Grain/Bread Exhibit
A, Divide the serving size of the product by the
ounce equivalent shown in this Exhibit. - Remember to round down to the nearest quarter.
16Option 2
- For this school year (2012-2013) only
- Divide the enriched and whole grain gram weight
obtained from the manufacturer by 14.75 grams - Remember to round down to the nearest quarter
17Option 3
- For this school year and beyond
- Using Exhibit A from memo SP 30-2012, divide the
serving size by the ounce equivalent from the
revised Exhibit A. - Remember to round down to the nearest quarter.
18Option 4
- For this school year and beyond
- Divide the enriched and whole grain gram weight
obtained from the manufacturer by 16 grams. - Remember to round down to the nearest quarter.
19Calculation Example
- FORMULA
- Weight of the Whole Grain
- Divided by
- Total Weight of Flour Whole grain in Recipe
- EXAMPLE 1Formula has 6 lbs. of enriched flour
and 9 lbs. WG - 6 lbs. 9 lbs. 15 lbs.
- 9 lbs. divided by 15 lbs. 60 Whole Grain
- EXAMPLE 2 Formula has 2 ½ cups enriched flour,
4 ½ cups Whole Grain flour, ½ cup oatmeal - 2 ½ cups 4 ½ cups ½ cup 7 ½ cups
- 5 cups divided by 7 ½ cups 67 Whole Grain
- Taken from NY SNA training
20To Count Breadingor Not
- SY 2012-2013 SFA can decide whether or not to
count breading gt .25 oz eq. toward the daily and
weekly grain requirements. - SY 2013-2014 SFA must count all grains gt .25 oz
eq. towards the weekly grain range. - Note SFAs do not need to count grains offered
in amounts less than .25 oz eq.
21Salad Bars and Grains
- In order for students to take proper serving
sizes on salad bars, here are some suggestions by
USDA - 1. Use serving utensils that are in the portion
size that you want them to take. (ex., ½ cup
spoodle for veggies and fruits). - Preportion servings (ex. Weigh out 2 oz of
croutons and serve in souffle cups). - Make a pre portioned roll available to students
who take a salad bar meal. - Go to http//www.fns.usda.gov/cnd/governance/Pol
icy-Memo/2011/SP02-2011osr.pdf for more
suggestions. -
22Water and Pasta
- Fully cooked grain and pasta items whose
nutrition label has water as the first
ingredient, followed by a whole grain is
considered whole grain-rich.
23Grain Based Desserts
- There is a limit of up to two ounce equivalents
of grain-based desserts per week (total of 2
ounce equivalents).
24Recipes
- Are recipes where you are using 50 whole wheat
flour and 50 white flour allowable to meeting
the 50 grain requirement? - This will meet the 50 whole grains requirement
if there are no other grains involved in the
recipe.
25Healthier US School Challenge
- for more information go to the USDA Team
Nutrition website - http//www.fns.usda.gov/tn/
- Thank you.
- Cheri White
- cwhite_at_doe.nh.gov