Henry Owen with Friendship Gardens put together this video tour of the Green Teacher Network's Ultimate Schoolyard Garden at the Southern Spring Home and Garden Show. The event will continue Feb. 28-March 2 at the Park Expo on Independence Boulevard. . CLICK for details of the show and tickets.
Monday, February 24, 2014
Tour of Ultimate Schoolyard Garden
Henry Owen with Friendship Gardens put together this video tour of the Green Teacher Network's Ultimate Schoolyard Garden at the Southern Spring Home and Garden Show. The event will continue Feb. 28-March 2 at the Park Expo on Independence Boulevard. . CLICK for details of the show and tickets.
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Our Ultimate Schoolyard Garden grows here
Horticulturist Annie West explains how she and others are growing hundreds of plants for the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden that will be displayed at the Southern Spring Home & Garden Show. The Catawba River District and several partners are creating the display. Learn more.
Thursday, January 2, 2014
Chefs in the Classroom: Plant Part Salad and Poppy Seed Dressing
Green Teacher Network invited Megan Lambert, senior instructor at Johnson & Wales University, and Sean Cosby, a personal chef, to create cooking demonstrations to help classroom teachers with schoolyard gardens incorporate fresh produce in their lessons.
This video features Megan making Plant Part Salad and Poppy Seed Dressing.
Megan's tips for involving students
This recipe is good for when talking with kids about horticulture and plant science. Megan notes that that the key ingredients represent different parts of the plant. You can use plants from your garden or from the store. This is a fall salad, but you can do the same kind of salad in every season. Making a soup would be a nice variation on this.MIXING INGREDIENTS – You can involve children in the mixing by having them form a line and then letting each child add or mix an ingredient. When mixing the salad dressing, you can put the ingredients in a plastic shaker and then have the children take turns shaking it.
TOOLS YOU WILL NEED – Big bowl for broccoli; smaller bowl for mixing dressing; slicer for slicing carrots; whisk; spatula
SAFETY – Megan advises not letting children use the vegetable slicer due to the risk of them getting cut. She also cautions instructors to be careful, too, and to not try slicing the carrots and celery all the way to the end.
Plant Part Salad Ingredients
Flower – Broccoli, already chopped and blanched in lightly salted water – 6 cupsFruit – North Carolina Pink Lady Apple, also diced – 1 apple
Leaves – Red onions, finely diced – 1/2 onion
Seeds – Poppy seeds for poppy seed dressing – 1 Tbsp
Stem – Celery cut into sticks – 2 stalks
Roots – Carrots – 2 carrots
Making the salad
Start with the chopped broccoli in a large bowl.Add the apples and mix.
Add the onions and mix.
Place the slicer over the bowl and carefully slice the carrots and celery.
Dressing ingredients
Greek yogurt – 1/4 cupLight mayonnaise – 1/4 cup
Honey – 1-2 Tbsp
Poppy seeds – 1 Tbsp
Orange for zest and juice – 1 orange
Sherry vinegar (other kinds of vinegar are fine, too) – 2 Tbsp
Making the dressing
Mix the Greek yogurt and light mayonnaise in a smaller bowlAdd the honey and poppy seeds
Place the zester over the mixture and slowly scrape off part of the orange rind. Rotate the orange and continue scraping. Add about a tablespoon of scraped rind this way.
Cut the orange in half across its middle.
Place an orange half in the orange press and squeeze out the juice. Repeat.
Add the vinegar and whisk the ingredients until smooth.
Pour the dressing over the salad and mix thoroughly.
Enjoy!
Chefs in the Classroom: Sweet Potato Pie Smoothie
Green Teacher Network invited Megan Lambert, a culinary instructor at Johnson & Wales University, and Sean Cosby, a personal chef, to create cooking demonstrations to help classroom teachers with schoolyard gardens incorporate fresh produce in their lessons.
This video features Sean making Sweet Potato Pie Smoothie.
Chefs in the Classroom - Ranch Dressing and Cucumber Slices
Green Teacher Network invited Megan Lambert, a culinary instructor at Johnson & Wales University, and Sean Cosby, a personal chef, to create cooking demonstrations to help classroom teachers with schoolyard gardens incorporate fresh produce in their lessons.
This video features Sean making Ranch Dressing with Greek Yogurt – a tasty topping for garden produce such as cucumbers.
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Chefs in the Classroom - Massaged Kale Salad
This video features Megan Lambert making Massaged Kale Salad and showing how even young students can lend hand - literally!
Massaged Greens Salad
Recipe by Megan Lambert, RD, JWU Culinary Instructor
This salad sounds a little scary, even for veggie lovers. The dressing makes it really delicious, though, and kids love to help massage the greens!
This salad sounds a little scary, even for veggie lovers. The dressing makes it really delicious, though, and kids love to help massage the greens!
Ingredients:
1-2 bunches fresh kale or mustard greens
1 lemon for juice and zest
1 clove garlic
3 Tbsp Parmesan cheese
3Tbsp olive oil
Method:
Thoroughly wash the greens in several changes of water.
Remove stems. Cut the greens into thin ribbons and
place into a large bowl.
Zest the lemon, and squeeze juice into a small jar.
Mash the garlic and add it to the jar.
Add the cheese and olive oil to the jar. Place the lid
on the jar, and shake to mix the dressing.
Pour the dressing over the greens in the bowl.
With very clean hands or wearing rubber gloves (over very
clean hands), massage the dressing into the greens for a few minutes.
Really squeeze and mix the greens!
Enjoy!
"I Tried It!" Kids and kale in Charlotte Schools
Erin Brighton, director of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Food Policy Council, recently wrote about her experience making this salad. READ ERIN'S BLOG and see the recipe.
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