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Applesauce in the Classroom: planting seeds of healthy eating

From Crossroads to Beet Street to Pennsylvania Ave, D.C. is well on its way to “growing a garden city.” Alongside the many other organizations that are working to expand access to green spaces and fresh produce, the Washington Youth Garden is continuing to learn the value of inspiring young people to be agents of change. Change at their family’s dinner tables, that is.

While young people are not usually the ones making direct food purchasing choices, their ability to affect these decisions should not be underestimated. During one of our hour and a half Garden Science lessons, third and fourth graders cut up apples and watched them cook down into a sweet, cinnamon-spiced treat. We sent the young chefs home with recipes and the following week we heard several reports about applesauce-making adventures at home. (Our Garden Science program goes into classes every week for two months to teach science and nutrition lessons. The program also brings students out the Youth Garden and installs school gardens at participating schools.)

The evidence is there: studies for over 20 years have shown that children who participate in gardening learn to like healthy foods. It’s not surprising that after gardening, kids have more positive attitudes toward fruit and vegetable snacks. Watching their vegetables grow spurs interest and investment in these new foods.

At the Washington Youth Garden we make every effort to set a positive tone—we know that tasting homemade applesauce or a vegetable stir fry might be a new experience, and they might not like it. We tell them that, and remind them that that’s ok: we just want them to give it a shot. Creating opportunities for young people to help cook fresh foods from scratch makes healthy eating fun. As one of our fourth graders declared, “Everyone in the halls is jealous because we’re eating healthy AND it takes good!”

Cooking is also a great way to reinforce a clear, easily digestible message about nutrition: “Can you trace this food back to the soil? If so, it’s probably good for you.” Nutrition science can get complicated fast. By keeping our message simple and accessible, we empower young people with a real take-home message, something they can literally bring back to their parents, siblings and extended families.

Making gardens is a first great step. Helping families gain access to fresh produce is also critically important. But amongst these exciting ventures we need to continue supporting educational spaces to help coax kids out from their high-fructose-coated comfort zones.

For decades, processed food marketers have recognized kids to be hidden gold mines, hitting them over the head with catchy packaging and sugar-pumped yogurts and snacks. Nutrition education may not be as flashy and hyper as these zippy ads on TV, but over time it can be just as potent. As we seek new ways to support healthy communities, we have a lot to learn from the youngest among us. Their voices ring out loud and clear—and when they taste something good, they want more where that came from.

- Anna Benfield
Washington Youth Garden
Education Assistant

Washington Youth Garden’s free family program

Embark upon an exciting journey with your family and others in learning how to grow and prepare fruits and vegetables in creative and healthy ways with the Washington Youth Garden’s family program, Growing Food…Growing Together. Participants learn and work collectively in communal gardening areas, share in the harvest of mutually grown organic produce, and experience [...]

Oct 12: Kick-off D.C. Farm to School Week and D.C. School Garden Week

Please join us on Tuesday, October 12th to kick-off D.C. Farm to School Week and D.C. School Garden Week. We’ll be celebrating locally-grown, seasonal food in school meals and highlighting exciting efforts across the District of Columbia to create and maintain vibrant school gardens. When: Tuesday, October 12th ; 1:00pm Where: Thurgood Marshall Academy and [...]

save the date! Oct 16 DC School Gardens Bike Tour

As a part of the fourth annual DC School Garden Week, held this year in conjunction with DC Farm to School Week, join us for the third annual DC School Gardens Bike Tour. We’ll visit five school gardens – a mix of public schools, charter schools, new gardens, established gardens, from the Southeast to the [...]

video: 39th Annual Family Cook-off at Washington Youth Garden

video: 39th Annual Family Cook-off at Washington Youth Garden

Seventeen year old youth intern from WYG cooking on Channel 9

Here’s a video of recent Bladensburg High School graduate and aspiring chef Jonathon Gliss cooking a vegetable dish from produce he helps to grow at the Washington Youth Garden. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hl7H0NFrRHw Jonathon has spent his last two summers working at the Washington Youth Garden. During this last school year, he chose to continue his time with [...]

Cooking with kids – it works!

This was our first summer at the Washington Youth Garden working with the Mayor’s Green Summer Job Corp Program. Administered through the District Department of the Environment, over 800 youth are employed by the city to perform outdoor-based work to improve our urban environment. We hosted one crew of fourteen and fifteen year olds who [...]

Celebrate healthy food and gardening on July 24 at the Washington Youth Garden

Please join us at the Washington Youth Garden for our annual summer bash – a Friends and Family Fun Day. Come anytime between 12pm and 4pm on Saturday, July 24th.  And bring friends! Thanks to our garden manager Chris Turse (and other staff, volunteers, and our youth workers, of course), the garden looks the best [...]