BFS Blog - Growing Brooksfield for a Greener tomorrow.

Tag >> Nutrition

As the founder of Brooksfield, I have always felt it was my duty to keep learning and growing as a person so that I could share those interests with the students through programs that we have designed to keep Brooksfield on the cutting edge. Interests in Outdoor Adventures, photography, sustainability, organic gardening, social development outside the Montessori classroom and team building to name a few.

Over the past several years I have worked with a group of women named The Citizens for Community Wellness who work together to build better lifestyle options for our McLean community. We held Green Day last year in an attempt to educate our families about healthier and better choices available for our children's health, exercise and home life.

We also introduced you last year to better nutrition through classes taught by Anita Capizzi RN and health counselor. Some of you continued your time with her and ended with cooking classes at my home. All in all a wonderful experience where we all grew together in our understanding of eating whole foods and how that equates to better health.

This year, I have become a student at The Institute for Integrative Health. I am pursuing a degree in Health Coaching/Counseling. This course will take a year and while I am learning a lot about food choices and how it correlates to health, it is educating me how to make better snack and food choices for our students at Brooksfield. I do feel we are all connected and that the well being of one is good for all and the well being of the whole group is our goal.

I have already targeted items at Trader Joe's that will be better for our kids. I am working with our Brooksfield team to identify seasonal items that will change throughout the year that will fill our children with less additives, chemicals and fillers that really are not good for their building bodies.
We take such care and pride in our educational, social, emotional, spiritual and physical education that the area of nutrition needed our attention.

I invite you to contact me to talk about health concerns as we continue to improve our lifelong devotion to making Brooksfield a healthy, happy and harmonious place for our children to grow, learn and thrive. I do believe that this is an inside job so continuing classes this year will be developed for our families and staff. My heart goes out to our parents as you and your children are bombarded with strong and effective marketing that makes buying sugary cereals and empty macaroni and cheese the easy solution. I am hearing from our moms that dinner is on the fly and not a sit down event. Kids are screaming for what they see on TV and the current marketing tells you its ok because it is somehow fortified. I ask you to read more and dig deeper and to use your own common sense. Should a cupcake have 50 ingredients? Most of which you can not pronounce and don't know what it is? Check out the labels the next time you go to pick up packaged food for your family.

The simple truth is always so easy to grasp but often difficult to execute, so let's work together: Eat whole foods that come from nature, avoid processed and chemically altered foods. Eat local and organic when you can. Eat seasonally and stay in touch with nature. That is how children prefer to live. We can take our cue from them!

Love to hear from you and talk about this new exciting development at Brooksfield! Working together is easier than trying to do it alone. I have grocery lists of good food items and suggestions that might make the task a bit easier to swallow! maduffus@aol.com


By: Anita Capizzi, R.N., CHC

 Fall is in the air these days. Football has begun. School is back in session. Routines are starting to be the norm again.

Which routines in your life could be healthier?

Do you walk the kids down to the bus stop, helping everyone to feel connected to the seasons and to the earth? Or do you drive to the bus?

Is fast food an easy way to take care of dinner after soccer or football practice? It's super easy to make unhealthy choices when we don't have a plan! If we take the time to plan ahead - decide on meals in advance, store cut up vegetables and chicken or meat in the freezer, have pre-made meals frozen in portions, washed lettuce in the bin, etc., we affirm our right to enjoy abundant health!

It's easy to get caught in a rut doing the same
old thing; driving instead of walking, take out instead of home cooked food. Choose another way. See how you can upgrade your routines to promote health. Freshly ground almond or peanut butter instead of processed? A commitment to make homemade salad dressings just for the Fall? Try something new this season- just one new thing- see how much better it feels to make your health a priority!

 

 

 

 

 


Boxed Cereal for Breakfast?

by Anita Capizzi, R.N., CHC

What do your children eat for breakfast on school days? If you say cereal, I say give other foods a chance! We have all heard that breakfast is the most important meal of the day...why is that? Our bodies and particularly our brains need the proper fuel to set the pace for the upcoming day.

Many processed cereals turn into sugar very quickly in our bodies because they are made from refined carbohydrates. There is nothing in the cereal to slow down the digestion process. That means that the fuel we have given our children to start their school day, is quickly used up and gone! That causes hunger pangs and distractibility early in the day. What could we feed our children that would digest slower and help to give them lasting energy throughout the morning?  

Try out these different breakfast ideas for lasting nourishment:

-    oatmeal with organic raisins and a maple syrup to sweeten
-    almond butter and banana sandwich on whole grain toast
-    breakfast egg sandwich on whole grain muffin with organic cheese
-    avocado on whole grain toast sprinkled with sea salt and extra virgin olive oil
-    leftover quinoa or millet with warm milk, walnuts, fruit and honey or maple syrup

The whole grain toast, oatmeal and quinoa or millet are whole grains that get digested much slower than refined grains. Avocado and almond butter are healthy fats which are super beneficial to the brain! Eggs and quinoa are proteins which provide lasting energy. Switch it up in the morning for a welcome break from the ordinary while providing your child with optimal nutrition!

 


By Anita Capizzi, R.N., CHC


What do your Brooksfield children eat for breakfast on school days? If you say cereal, I say give other foods a chance! We have all heard that breakfast is the most important meal of the day...why is that? Our bodies and particularly our brains need the proper fuel to set the pace for the upcoming day.

Many processed cereals turn into sugar very quickly in our bodies because they are made from refined carbohydrates. There is nothing in the cereal to slow down the digestion process. That means that the fuel we have given our children to start their school day, is quickly used up and gone! That causes hunger pangs and distractibility early in the day. What could we feed our children that would digest slower and help to give them lasting energy throughout the morning?  

Try out these different breakfast ideas for lasting nourishment:

-    oatmeal with organic raisins and a maple syrup to sweeten
-    almond butter and banana sandwich on whole grain toast
-    breakfast egg sandwich on whole grain muffin with organic cheese
-    avocado on whole grain toast sprinkled with sea salt and extra virgin olive oil
-    leftover quinoa or millet with warm milk, walnuts, fruit and honey or maple syrup

The whole grain toast, oatmeal and quinoa or millet are whole grains that get digested much slower than refined grains. Avocado and almond butter are healthy fats which are super beneficial to the brain! Eggs and quinoa are proteins which provide lasting energy. Switch it up in the morning for a welcome break from the ordinary while providing your child with optimal nutrition!

 

Brooksfield School Hosts

1st Annual McLean Green Day: Organic Food, Fitness and Fun!
 
Saturday, October 23, 2010
9am-12 noon

Sponsored By:

Green Living Consulting
Green Spur
McLean Chamber of Commerce

Come join us for a morning filled with GREEN activities centered around:
• Fitness
• Nutrition
• Greening Your Home
• Organic gardening
• Halloween activities

Fun for all ages!

Enjoy:
• Pony Rides, Face Painting, Pumpkin Painting, Live Entertainment, Climbing Wall, Halloween Games, and more!

Also:
• Supervisor John Foust will speak about our county's GREEN initiatives.

• Meet GREEN vendors and learn how to save on your energy costs.

• Learn from GREEN builders, architects and specialists on how to make simple GREEN changes at home and at work.

• Watch a demonstration on composting and organic gardening.

• Enjoy healthy treats that will boost your family's intake of antioxidants, minerals, vitamins, and more!

• Network with McLean families and business owners to learn about what's happening in our community in terms of fitness, nutrition, and greening efforts

• Meet local farmers too!

 

Hope you can make it!

 


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