For 45 minutes each week, students in Jessica Busch's class at Red Pine Elementary in Eagan are no longer just first-graders. Instead, when they don their white chef hats, they become Food Explorers, ready to touch, taste and smell foods that many of them have never tried before.
Last week, the students sampled "Superhero Salad," a mixture of spinach, mozzarella cheese and apples topped with a homemade dressing made of orange juice, basil and honey.
The verdict: There were a lot more "oohs" than "ewws," and nearly every kid liked it.
"I think they like experimenting in the classroom, and from what I've heard from parents, some will go home and try the recipes there," Busch said.
That's the point of Food Explorers, now in its second year, said Teresa Ambroz, health and wellness manager with the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation. The program was developed in collaboration with schools to reach kindergarten and first-grade students "so they could develop healthy habits when they're young," Ambroz said.
Another goal is to involve kids in preparing food so they can make meals at home.
The program was tested last year at two elementary schools, including Red Pine. In surveys, 73 percent of parents said their kids were more willing to try new foods after participating, and all of the teachers saw students increasing their fruit and vegetable consumption during lunch and snack times, Ambroz said.
A collaborative effort
Food Explorers trains parent and graduate student volunteers to go into classrooms in four south-metro schools, including two Burnsville-Eagan-Savage schools and Red Pine in Rosemount-Apple Valley-Eagan. About 600 kids participate, Ambroz said.