Pasta with Chicken Sausage and Vegetables; Childhood Obesity and the Snack Epidemic

Last night’s dinner proved the cliche that your dish is only as good as the quality of the ingredients. Which isn’t to say that the ingredients were bad, they just could have been better. I tossed together pasta with a little sauteed red onion, red pepper, halved cherry tomatoes, sliced escarole and chicken sausage. I finished the dish with grated parmesan cheese. And it was almost very good. But the sausage I used came from Trader Joe’s, a store that sells what I consider to be quality ingredients. Unfortunately, the sausage was packaged, not fresh, and that made all the difference. Louisa was the first to say that she didn’t care for the sausage, it tasted funny to her. I usually love sausage, but I wasn’t looking for a second portion. Oh well, I’ll know better the next time.

Childhood Obesity and the Snack Epidemic

After receiving feedback to my question asking readers whether you’re interested in reading news stories in this blog, I’ve backed off the whole food news bit. But today I feel an issues rant coming on, so I hope you’ll understand…

I don’t think a day passes now when the news doesn’t carry some kind of story about the childhood obesity “epidemic”. Michelle Obama has her First Lady campaign against this epidemic, which hopefully raises awareness of some of the complex issues contributing to the problem. By now we’re aware that kids need to exercise more and eat more fruits and vegetables. But one of the contributing factors I don’t hear discussed enough is one that I think plays a major role in the problem. We’ve become a nation of snackers and we’ve raised our kids to spend their days moving from one snack to the next.

From the moment I joined a playgroup when Annie was a baby, I discovered that good moms come prepared with a diaper bag full of snacks for their child and to share with others. Cheerios and raisins were among the more nutritious choices. Snack crackers and “fruit” snacks were common among the less nutritious snack bags. But whatever we served them, the buffet was open all day as part of the strategy to keep the kids managed and distracted enough to go about our business. Whether we were heading to church, the supermarket, the mall, or for a ride in the car, you could toss a snack bag to the kids and anticipate 15 minutes of good behavior. They certainly weren’t hungry all of the time. Snacking was entertainment. Looking back now, I realize what horrible lessons we were teaching our babies, and they continue to this day.

Schools now tell the kids to bring in a mid-morning snack. After all, how could we expect them to make it all the way to lunchtime? There’s morning snack at camp, snacks packed in lunch boxes, snacks before leaving camp, and snacks when they get home. When my kids were younger, friends would come over and the first thing some of them would do is look to see what snacks are available at our house. Snacking was a major playtime activity.

Yesterday Louisa and I had an argument on the way back from camp because I never buy any “good” snacks. All the kids at camp have potato chips in their lunch boxes, why didn’t she? I buy bad snacks that she “hates” from Whole Foods. Yes, bad mom that I am, I try to buy snacks that, at least, are portion controlled and made from better quality processed ingredients. And frankly, if the snacks aren’t that irresistibly good, none of us in this house (because I’m certainly susceptible to temptation) will be inclined to binge on them.  What I’d like to know is why parents feel they need to include non-nutritious snacks like potato chips in their kids’ lunch boxes? Does every meal have to be a party?!?

I believe that if snacking wasn’t the sacred institution it has become in this country, there wouldn’t be a childhood obesity epidemic to the degree that we have one today. But since this generation has been raised with snacking as a given part of their day, I don’t know how Michelle Obama is going to turn around this problem, no many how many times she can shake a hula hoop around her hips.

I’ll leave you with a link to a funny segment from the Colbert Report, Thought for Food, where he mocks cereal manufacturers’ attempts to make their sugary, artificial breakfast food sound healthy to concerned moms and dads. Enjoy.

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Comments

5 Responses to “Pasta with Chicken Sausage and Vegetables; Childhood Obesity and the Snack Epidemic”

  1. zoogirl on July 30th, 2010 7:21 pm

    Well I think you’ve hit the nail on the head with the above blog. Snacking is the culprit in a big part of the obesity epidemic. Why do kids need food every 2 hours or even more often? Whatever became of ’3 squares’ a day? When my kids were little besides breakfast, lunch and dinner they had a ’3 o’clock snack’ when they got home from school. Of course there were exceptions when necessary, but on regular days would it kill most kids to feel a little hunger pang? We have conditioned this generation to be instantly and continuosly ‘fulfilled’ on many levels – food, t.v. toys. How will they ever learn how control or delayed gratification can actually be a good thing that can teach them to be less self-centered and more patient? I guess I sound old-fashioned, but I’m really not as rigid as this may sound. Anyway, thanks for letting me vent.

  2. Mike on July 31st, 2010 10:51 am

    I think snacking started with teachers trying to manage their young students energy level for optimal learning but non nutritious calorie dense foods have become snack fare.

    My point is that there is not too much snacking. I was going to post this yesterday but my my fingers were greasy from the chips I was eating. Later I came back to make my point about snacking but my fingers were sticky from the powdered sugar on my jelly doughnut. I came to your blog after dinner to tell you snacking was not the problem but my fingers were to gritty from the salted nuts I was eating. Finally today,after my mid morning snack, I can finally make my point that we are not a nation of snackers!

  3. Donna on July 31st, 2010 5:20 pm

    Hah! Good one.

  4. Donna on July 31st, 2010 5:22 pm

    I agree with your point on the continuous need for fulfillment on so many levels. Once again, I wonder whether this can ever be turned around.

  5. Chef Chuck on July 31st, 2010 6:39 pm

    This blend sounds great! I love sausage.
    Thank you for sharing:)

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