SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : Let's Talk About Our Feelings!!! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Zoltan! who wrote (23292)7/6/1998 6:59:00 PM
From: Grainne  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 108807
 
I'm sorry, Duncan, but Mr. Contreras is just wrong, wrong, wrong. As I pointed out last week from analyzing my own bottles of salsa and organic catsup, which would be the most wholesome kind, salsa is comprised of fresh, chopped vegetables. Catsup is tomato puree, vinegar, and sweeteners.

Here is a more objective article. I would suggest that Mr. Contreras bring in a nutritionist the next time he analyzes food ingredients, because he doesn't have a clue. Could he have a political motive, perhaps, in pretending that catsup is nutritious when it is not?

USDA Says Salsa is a Vegetable

By Michelle Mittelstadt
Associated Press Writer
Tuesday, June 30, 1998; 5:05 p.m. EDT

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Remember the uproar when the Reagan
administration tried to declare ketchup a vegetable for school lunches?

Well, ketchup may not have cut the mustard. But its cousin, salsa, has
received the government's seal of approval.

Seventeen years after the ketchup flap, the Agriculture Department has
decreed that school lunch programs can use salsa in crafting a nutritionally
balanced menu.

And even the nation's self-appointed food police approve of the action.

''It's tough enough to get kids to eat fruits and vegetables, so we're all in
favor of looking for different ways to do that. And this certainly sounds
like a sensible one,'' said David Schardt, an associate nutritionist with the
Center for Science in the Public Interest, the Washington-based group
known for its critiques of Chinese food and movie-theater popcorn.

Responding to requests from schools in the Southwest and West, the
Agriculture Department has announced that school lunch programs can
incorporate commercially made fruit and vegetable salsas into their menus.
Before that ruling last week, schools had been allowed to use salsas made
in their own kitchens.

''We think salsa is a great product and will help in the consumption of
more nutritious meals,'' said Ed Cooney, deputy administrator of special
nutrition programs at Agriculture's Food and Nutrition Service.

''It's part of our general trend toward enhancing the quality of nutrition
education we provide,'' Cooney said Tuesday. ''This is a lifelong
experience for kids, learning how to eat properly.''

School cafeterias have been dishing up salsa for a while, but it hasn't been
considered a reimbursable item under the federal school lunch program,
which paid out $4.9 billion to 94,000 schools last year.

USDA officials are clearly skittish about the inevitable comparisons
between the salsa rule and the much-ridiculed ketchup debacle.

''Ketchup is really mostly sugar and vinegar,'' said one Agriculture
Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity. ''This is not the
same because ... (salsa) is essentially a vegetable salad.''

While the ketchup-as-vegetable proposal was circulated as a cost-saving
option at a time when the Reagan administration was trying to pare $1.5
billion from the school lunch program, the salsa decision is part of USDA's
push toward low-fat, more interesting food options for the 26 million
children in the school lunch program, agriculture officials say.

In order to get government reimbursement, schools must offer nutritionally
balanced meals that include fruits and vegetables, protein, bread and milk.
Last year, over the objections of the cattle industry, the Agriculture
Department decided to allow yogurt as a meat substitute.

Under the salsa regulation, schools can get credit for a fruit or vegetable
serving if they provide at least one-eighth of a cup of salsa.

Schardt, the nutritionist, is happy about the change because salsa tends to
be ''less processed than boiled vegetables or fruit in thick syrup.''

search.washingtonpost.com