A6 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2015 COMMUNITY Cooks go back to school Culinary workshop helps lunch ladies and gentlemen meet federal meal guidelines By SEAN HART Staff Writer Cooking nutritious meals for students re- quires more than a dash of this and a pinch of that. Federal regulations require school cooks to provide certain amounts of various food catego- ries on a daily and weekly basis while adhering to calorie, fat and sodium guidelines. To help school nutri- tion specialists gain con- fidence and learn new ideas to meet the require- ments, the Oregon Dairy Council and the Oregon Department of Education have teamed up for the last six years to provide regional culinary work- shops throughout the state. In one of five train- ings planned this year, cooks from the local area COURT: continued from Page A5 Miguel Ray Gutierrez, 34, and Misty Dawn Wickersham, 28, both of Echo. Kenneth James Kramer Jr., 33, and Monique Renee Brandt, 33, both of Echo. Roy Ronald Linn, 51, of Hermiston and Ester Irene Johnson, 65, of Stanfi eld. Hugo F. Marroquin, 48, and Helidia Siqueiros, 47, both of Hermiston. Charles Robert McCallister, 39, and Leanne Marie Badoux, 40, both of Stanfi eld. Camerino Moreno, 61, and Maria Elena Munoz, 49, both of Hermiston. and as far away as Salem spent Thursday afternoon and Friday refreshing their culinary skills and learning 15 recipes that may end up on school menus this year. Oregon Dairy Council Nutrition Affairs Director Anne Goetze said cooks f r o m SCHOOLS e v e r y county in the state have participated in these trainings through the years. The workshops are free, she said, and the goal is to help the cooks provide nutritious meals to students. “We know when kids eat meals at schools — breakfast or lunch or even an after school snack or if there’s a dinner program too — that they eat better on average because the school meals follow a par- ticular pattern,” she said. “They’re serving whole grains. They’re serving a variety of colorful fruits and vegetables. They’re serving dairy foods and learn proteins. This kind of training gives the cooks the skills to prepare all of those foods.” Naythan Allen Olney, 33, and Sharmalee Marie Fraser, 44, both of Hermiston. David Jonathan Palacios, 23, and Ashlee Elizabeth Jean Ames, 21, both of Hermiston. Arturo Jr. Ramirez, 22, and Cher- okee Adrianna Jokinen, 19, both of Hermiston. Raymundo Sanchez Delgado, 23, and Magdalena De Jesus Torres, 21, both of Hermiston. Dylan Tommas Spence, 29, and Stephanie Ryan Tuttle, 26, both of Hermiston. Logan Mitchell Swaggart, 23, and Christine Paige McKenzie, 21, both of Boise, Idaho. The U.S. Department of Agriculture requirements differ by grade level and meal. The lunch meal pat- tern requirements for a high school student include one cup of fruit, one cup of vegetables, two ounc- es of grains, two ounc- es of meats or alternates and one cup of milk each meal, which must contain 750-850 calories, less than 10 percent saturated fat and less than 1,420 milli- grams of sodium. The re- quirements further specify amounts of different types of vegetables that must be served each week. Umatilla School Dis- trict Child Nutrition Di- rector Rikkilynn Larsen said the workshop was wonderful. “We got lots of ideas and some new recipes that we’d like to try in the school district and just some reminders too,” she said. “You just get into bad habits like holding the knife the wrong way.” The participants learned about the fed- eral requirements, culi- nary techniques, weights and measurements and worked on a variety of recipes. Jessica Visinsky, a child nutrition specialist for the Oregon Depart- ment of Education, said the workshops help the cooks learn new methods. Many of the recipes are made from scratch, she said, and the cooks get to experiment with hands-on sessions. She said, based on feedback received, STAFF PHOTO BY E.J. HARRIS Nutrition specialist Garrett Berdan, right, with the Oregon Department of Education, gives menu instructions to a group of participants in a culinary workshop Friday in Umatilla. many of the cooks are incorporating the lessons they learned into the pro- grams in their districts. “It gives (the cooks) the confidence to think outside the box and try new things and maybe in- crease the participation in their programs by doing that,” she said. “All the recipes that we’re doing meet the requirements for the federal child nutrition programs and provide vi- tamins, minerals, great fiber and a lot of nutri- ents that will really help (the students) to study or to have energy or focus throughout the day, and that’s our biggest role.” GUARANTEED to beat VERIZON & AT&T PLUS, UNLIMITED CONTRACT PAYOFF BREASTFEEDING CLASSES One class covers breastfeeding benefits, pumping and much more. 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