海角精品黑料

Bringing food to the families: Bustling markets inside D.C.’s elementary schools

Martha鈥檚 Markets launched in 2011 and currently operates in eight D.C. elementary schools throughout the school year and in the summer.聽Throughout the duration of the two-hour market, which starts at the school鈥檚 4 p.m. dismissal, students and their parents can shop, free of charge, for up to 23 pounds of groceries with a minimum of 40 percent fresh produce. (海角精品黑料/Rachel Nania)
For the students, shopping is the least exciting activity on market days. Most of them flock to a long table in the center of the room and await 鈥淐hef Jo Jo鈥檚鈥 instructions. (海角精品黑料/Rachel Nania)
“The idea is to have this great, wonderful vibe and lots of healthy produce,鈥 says Caron Gremont, senior director of healthy eating at Martha鈥檚 Table. On a recent Tuesday afternoon, she was at Amidon-Bowen Elementary School for the monthly event. 鈥淚t鈥檚 supposed to be fun and really for the community,鈥 she says. (海角精品黑料/Rachel Nania)
鈥淚 want everybody to hold their knives up in the air,鈥 Joel Thomas (aka: Chef Jo Jo) says to his captive audience. Kids seated in front of cutting boards and large pieces of squash and zucchini follow his orders. 鈥淓verybody make a thumbs-up. This is the correct way to hold the knife,鈥 he continues. Thomas continues to lead the young ones in the culinary lesson of the day. (海角精品黑料/Rachel Nania)
The point of the cooking demonstrations is to introduce the children and their parents to foods they may not be familiar with, and to show them how to turn fresh ingredients into a healthy meal. (海角精品黑料/Rachel Nania)
Martha鈥檚 Market is聽a monthly program from that brings fresh produce and shelf-stable food products into the city鈥檚 elementary schools.聽 (海角精品黑料/Rachel Nania)
A couple hundred people come through each school鈥檚 market to select their groceries, and most students in those schools receive free breakfast and free lunch at school. (海角精品黑料/Rachel Nania)
鈥淲e really try to emphasize the fruits and the vegetables, since that is what everybody is not consuming enough of,鈥 Gremont says. (海角精品黑料/Rachel Nania)
鈥淭he gap really is dinners and weekends, so the idea behind the market was to fill that gap and support families,鈥 Gremont says. 鈥淎 lot of families will say that being able to come and get groceries here gives them more cash to pay bills and do other things.鈥 (海角精品黑料/Rachel Nania)
Martha鈥檚 Markets launched in 2011 and currently operates in eight D.C. elementary schools throughout the school year and in the summer. In January, Martha鈥檚 Table started a similar program, called Joyful Food Markets, at four elementary schools east of the Anacostia River in Wards 7 and 8.   (海角精品黑料/Rachel Nania)
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WASHINGTON 鈥 It鈥檚 an idyllic spring afternoon near D.C.鈥檚 Southwest waterfront: Kids play peacefully with their friends, occasionally taking a break to dance to music coming from a corner stereo. Parents float from one stand of fresh produce to another, while chefs tend to hot pans and fill the air with smells of saut茅ed garlic and onions.

It鈥檚 not the latest pop-up market to enter the District鈥檚 dynamic food scene. It’s Martha鈥檚 Market 鈥 a monthly program from that brings fresh produce and shelf-stable food products into the city鈥檚 elementary schools.

鈥淭he idea is to have this great, wonderful vibe and lots of healthy produce,鈥 says Caron Gremont, senior director of healthy eating at Martha鈥檚 Table. On a recent Tuesday afternoon, she was at Amidon-Bowen Elementary School for the monthly event.

鈥淚t鈥檚 supposed to be fun and really for the community,鈥 she says.

Throughout the duration of the two-hour market, which starts at the school鈥檚 4 p.m. dismissal, students and their parents can shop, free of charge, for up to 23 pounds of groceries with a minimum of 40 percent fresh produce.

鈥淲e really try to emphasize the fruits and the vegetables, since that is what everybody is not consuming enough of,鈥 Gremont says.

But for the students, shopping is the least exciting activity on market days. Most of them flock to a long table in the center of the room and await 鈥淐hef Jo Jo鈥檚鈥 instructions.

鈥淚 want everybody to hold their knives up in the air,鈥 Joel Thomas (aka: Chef Jo Jo) says to his captive audience.

Kids seated in front of cutting boards and large pieces of squash and zucchini follow his orders.

鈥淓verybody make a thumbs-up. This is the correct way to hold the knife,鈥 he continues.

Thomas continues to lead the young ones in the culinary lesson of the day.

Vatiff Holland has been coming to the Martha鈥檚 Market at Amidon-Bowen Elementary School with her 5-year-old great-nephew for about six months. She says in that time, her little one has developed an interest in cooking.

鈥淗e loves cooking. When we鈥檙e at home cooking dinner 鈥 he鈥檒l help me season the chicken and flour it,鈥 she says about her nephew, who especially loves fried chicken. 鈥淗e鈥檚 a real good help in the kitchen.鈥

On the market day, Holland鈥檚 nephew chops zucchini and squash for Chef Thomas聽and assists the chef in saut茅ing the vegetables, which are later combined with whole wheat spaghetti and tomato sauce.

All of the kids are encouraged to taste the final product 鈥 but few need urging.

鈥淣o matter what kids are cooking, they鈥檙e going to take pride in what they make, and they鈥檙e going to be very passionate about trying what they make,鈥 Thomas says.

The point of the cooking demonstrations is to introduce the children and their parents to foods they may not be familiar with, and to show them how to turn fresh ingredients into a healthy meal.

鈥淭here have been people who have never known what to do with parsnips or kidney beans, and we come up with simple recipes for them, like kidney bean salad, saut茅ed parsnips or roasted squash,鈥 Thomas says.

鈥淲e鈥檙e basically showing them simple techniques that they can practice on food they鈥檙e not used to cooking.鈥

Printed recipe cards are available for students to take home, and all of the demonstrated聽dishes are made from ingredients available at the market.

Martha鈥檚 Markets launched in 2011 and currently operates in eight D.C. elementary schools throughout the school year and in the summer. In January, Martha鈥檚 Table started a similar program, called Joyful Food Markets, at four elementary schools east of the Anacostia River in Wards 7 and 8.

Gremont says the ultimate goal is to bring Joyful Food Markets to every public and charter elementary school in Wards 7 and 8 鈥 a goal that may soon be within reach. Earlier this month, Martha鈥檚 Table announced plans to build a $20 million 40,000 square-foot facility in the Hillsdale neighborhood of Anacostia.

For the last 35 years, Martha鈥檚 Table has run its early childhood education, after-school care and healthy eating programs out of its headquarters on the 2100 block of 14th Street NW.

However, in recent years, that neighborhood has . Pawnshops and liquor stores have been replaced by luxury condo buildings and trendy restaurants.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been on 14th Street for 35 years, we鈥檙e really part of the fabric of the community there,鈥 Gremont says. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e also expanding and adding a new center in Ward 8 to continue working with the community there. There鈥檚 a need and we really feel like we can go and stand with the community there and make an impact.鈥

The new facility will open in 2018 and will offer the same child and nutrition services available at the 14th Street location.

鈥淏ut in some respects, we will be able to reach more children,鈥 Gremont says. Children make up about 30 percent of Ward 8鈥檚 population.

Gremont estimates a couple hundred people come through each school鈥檚 market to select their groceries, and most students in those schools receive free breakfast and free lunch at school.

鈥淭he gap really is dinners and weekends, so the idea behind the market was to fill that gap and support families,鈥 Gremont says. 鈥淎 lot of families will say that being able to come and get groceries here gives them more cash to pay bills and do other things.鈥

Adding additional markets in Ward 8 also gives the community another way in which residents can overcome the area’s food desert.

鈥淓specially in Ward 7 and Ward 8, there just is not easy access to grocery stores, so being able to have really good high-quality produce here, for a lot of people, it just makes it so much easier to eat it,鈥 Gremont says.

鈥淚 think what we鈥檙e really trying to do here is 鈥 provide healthy, high-quality food, and then also give children and families opportunity, support, encouragement to actually eat it 鈥 to make it fun to eat fruits and vegetables and healthy food. And I think the combination of those is what鈥檚 really powerful about what we鈥檙e trying to do.鈥

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