Related Stories


Share

:
The Swarthmore Food Cooperative

Comment on this article


The Swarthmore Food Cooperative

Sharples begins to publicize organic cereals and food without transfats

This semester, many students in Sharples have noticed the appearance of organic cereals and bright green heart stickers that denote organic food products or food prepared without transfats. Sharples' purchasing director Janet Kassab has observed that most of these "changes" are actually responses to student requests to know what kinds of ingredients are in the food that we eat in Sharples.

"What the students want, we do our best to give," explains Kassab, who is eager to meet the needs and requests of students, citing the daily efforts to provide alternative meals for those who cannot eat certain ingredients. The addition of organic cereals, which Kassab jokingly refers to as her "hippie corner," was specifically intended to meet the needs of students who need wheat or gluten free cereal.

How else do students make requests of Sharples? "The napkin board is fairly effective." The attention to transfats, for example, is actually a result of questions from students. While the switch to transfat free frying oil was nothing new, the big difference is that Sharples is now "advertising" the lack of transfats. The new philosophy on healthy ingredients in Sharples: "If you've got it, flaunt it," Kassab says, alluding to stickers such as those marking the low fat yogurts and visible cartons for organic tomatoes.

Kassab also observes that when it comes to food with transfats, "the real culprits are the baked goods." However, Kassab hopes to address that as well, since General Mills, which recently bought Pillsbury, has been creating new frozen baked goods with fewer tranfats in their preservatives.

The attention students are paying to healthy food is "here to stay" in Kassab's opinion. She doubts that the consumption of foods with these healthy ingredients is dramatically different than before the labelling system, although "if anything, we've had less this year to send to the homeless at the end of the week," students are definitely more concerned about what they're putting in their mouths.

As part of an effort to encourage this awareness, Kassab has been hoping to have a health awareness day in March as well as running a competition (the materials for which can be found in the office at the top of Sharples) to design a new slogan and logo to mark special health-conscious selections at Sharples. The student whose submission is selected will win a prize.

Share:

Print    Email

Standards and Measurements: Rules and Regulations for Getting in Our Pants

Salutations! We are pleased to introduce ourselves as your newest sex columnists, Marianne and Ginger. We're two heterosexual, twenty-something, intrepid sexual adventurers and friends with a love of all things Swarthmore (and all things sex). In this column, we claim a new space to express our sexual selves, to share our insights and mishaps with you, and to spark a too often muted dialogue.

Submit a Comment

: Log in to verify your identity.
: Required, but will not be made public.

Comments posted anonymously must be approved by Gazette staff before they are published.


Discussion Rules

  • Be nice.
  • Be constructive.
  • Don't curse.
  • Don't threaten.

More details on our policies here.


Register an Account | Login