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Posts Tagged ‘children’s lunches’

“Vegetable Soup” by Malgorzata Lewandowska-Zych via They Draw & Cook (click to enlarge)

1. Love this “Vegetable Soup” recipe poem by Polish artist Malgorzata Lewandowska-Zcyh — her name’s quite a mouthful, isn’t it? Just like a big spoonful of yummy soup containing carrots, celery, potatoes, beans, cauliflower and parsley. “Malgorzata” = Margaret.  This is one of the best illustrated recipes I’ve seen at They Draw & Cook.

2. Speaking of which, there’s now a They Draw and Cook for Kids! Ebook available for download on your iPad. You get 20 recipes for only $1.99. Here are three samples:

“English Muffin Pizza Faces” by Alison Kolesar (click to enlarge)

“Pretzel S’mores” by Jennifer Bell

“Ants on a Log” by Stefan Jolet

3. Have you started your holiday shopping yet? I’ve already ordered several of these adorable macaron trinket boxes via Waiting on Martha. You can purchase them individually (light pink, rose, pistachio, lavender, yellow, peach) or as a set of 12, which comes in a pretty lavender presentation box. Great stocking stuffers or bridesmaids gifts. Which reminds me, I haven’t actually eaten a macaron in ages. If you feel like sending me some, feel free :) !

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What's in Cornelius's lunchbox this time?

Last week, Cornelius was somewhat disappointed to find a ham and cheese sandwich in his lunchbox. Same old, same old. Funny, he’d never complained about rubber food before ☺.

Maybe it wasn’t the food itself, but his curiosity about how it got there. In How Did That Get in My Lunchbox?: The Story of Food by Chris Butterworth and Lucia Gaggiotti (Candlewick, 2011), we learn the interesting backstories of typical lunch ingredients (bread, cheese, apples, clementines, apple juice, carrots, tomatoes, and the chocolate in chocolate chip cookies). Most of us take our food for granted as it magically appears on supermarket shelves. Unless children have grown up on a farm or visited an orchard or cheese factory, they might not realize that quite a few people have had a hand in producing some of the things we eat every day.

Bread begins with the farmer who grows and harvests the wheat. Then there’s the miller who grinds it into flour, and the baker who mixes and kneads the flour before baking those warm, crusty loaves. With lively and engaging text, Butterworth breaks down the production of each food into sequential steps. We see how cow’s milk is turned into cheese at the dairy, how greenhouse tomatoes are planted, sorted, packed and distributed, how harvested apples are mashed into juice at the factory.

click to enlarge

Cheery illustrations provide fascinating details (trucks, machines, animals, workers, production lines, farms, fields, orchards) which help to clarify tasks. There’s also a chart of the four basic food groups with advice on the importance of drinking adequate water, eating a variety of fruits and veggies, and getting enough exercise.

This is a good introduction that will foster appreciation for the vital role of each element in the production chain, getting kids to think about the importance of both human and natural resources. Extra points for the cute endpapers and highly appealing title page spread showing a culturally diverse group of kids with cool lunchboxes in a nice variety of shapes, colors and styles. Oh, and I love the mustached bread baker who has a decidedly French attitude! Oui,oui!

Nom nom

HOW DID THAT GET IN MY LUNCHBOX?: The Story of Food
written by Chris Butterworth
illustrated by Lucia Gaggiotti
published by Candlewick Press, January 2011
Picture book with nice rounded corners and 32 thick pages for ages 4-8

Oh boy, cookies!

Today’s Nonfiction Monday Roundup is at Tales from the Rushmore Kid. Check out the menu and have a good week!

 

For Lunch Box Love (Part One), click here.

**Chocolate Chip Cookies by Back to the Cutting Board/flickr

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Copyright © 2011 Jama Rattigan of Jama’s Alphabet Soup. All rights reserved.

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