Today, Explained - Cafeteria wars
Episode Date: January 22, 2025RFK Jr. is the latest in a long line of reformers who have tried to clean up school lunch. The history of those attempts illustrates how hard it is to change the American food system. This episode was... produced by Miles Bryan, edited by Jolie Myers, fact-checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by Patrick Boyd and Andrea Kristinsdottir, and hosted by Noel King. Transcript at vox.com/today-explained-podcast Support Today, Explained by becoming a Vox Member today: http://www.vox.com/members Healthy cafeteria food options at IDEA Public Charter School in northeast Washington, DC. Photo by Miles Bryan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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It's Today Explained.
I'm Noelle King with Miles Bryan.
Senior reporter and producer for the program. Hello?
Hi. You went to public school, right, Miles?
Yes. Go South High Tigers.
What do you remember about school lunch?
Ooh, I remember sad lasagna, shrink-wrapped
in little containers.
I remember avoiding it.
Do you remember the nugs, the chicken nuggets?
Bwop, bwop, bwop, bwop.
Yeah, if I had to eat school lunch,
that was a pretty good option.
I actually liked them. But in addition to eat school lunch, that was a pretty good option. I actually liked them.
But in addition to being very tasty, those nugs were very processed.
And at the moment, America has got processed foods in its crosshairs.
It's true.
We are collectively very down on processed food right now.
None more so than Health and Human Services Secretary nominee Robert Fullride Kennedy
Jr.
I'll get processed food out of school lunch immediately.
About half the school lunch program goes to processed food.
Hen, the man who once saved a dead bear cub for a snack, fixed school lunches.
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You're listening to Today Explained.
I'm Noelle King and last week, Miles Bryan and I went to Idea Charter School in Northeast DC. Okay, Miles, the challenge for American school lunches
is to get the ultra-processed foods out.
And the challenger is?
My name is Reese Powell.
Reese Powell, he's the CEO of a company called Red Rabbit.
So Red Rabbit is one of the largest
black-owned school food companies,
but we're really a social justice company.
Red Rabbit's mission is to serve kids, you know,
basically the opposite of chicken nuggets.
Fresh, healthy, unprocessed.
Our chefs prepare meals using whole real ingredients.
Very nice.
Sure, that all sounds good, but that doesn't mean it's easy.
Take chicken, for an example.
If you want to serve chicken and you use a processed chicken, it comes with a CN label.
A CN label, that's a child nutrition label.
It shows how a food fits into the federal rules around what goes on the plate.
You see them a lot on prepackaged school foods.
The school food regulations like the CN label because then they can flow through into the school food regulations.
And so if you're an operator, the process of buying chicken,
then giving the CN label to the regulators to prove to them
that you bought the chicken is a very straightforward one.
We don't use processed chicken, we use real chicken.
Real chicken doesn't come with the CN label.
Neither does any real produce come with a packaging label.
And so the process of us explaining to the regulators
that we are following the rules and we are doing
what's necessary for the children to have a healthy meal is a little bit more complex, a little more complicated
because the system isn't designed for you to serve whole natural real chicken.
So Reese Powell and Red Rabbit, they have to go the extra mile to make their fresh chicken work
for the USDA, which runs the school lunch program. They got to replicate that process with all their
food and they got to do it all within the budget the federal government provides, which is about $4 per
lunch per kid.
And even if you can solve for all of those challenges, you still have to cook the food,
which requires a real chef. In this case, in Northeast DC, that is Darian DeVar. Wow, chef may I come behind the line?
I've never... okay. So today we have a spaghetti with whole wheat pasta and we have mixed veggies
that's green beans, sauteed peppers, peppers and onions, a fresh garden salad. We also have
parmesan cheese and something that I love dearly,
which is the brown butter ricotta.
It comes with very well with the pasta,
and the kids absolutely love it.
Let me ask you about these green beans,
because I am dipping in the past,
but you do remember the green beans.
I do.
You remember they were colorless.
They were colorless.
They were flavorless.
What's the word?
They're very, very, slimy.
Yeah, exactly.
I do. You got peppers in there. You got onions in there. You got spices in there, too. They were, what's the word, they're very, slimy, yeah exactly.
You got peppers in there, you got onions in there,
you got spices in there too?
Absolutely, spices, garlic, seasoning.
There was not a chicken nugget in sight in Northeast DC.
Yeah, that meal looked beautiful,
but as the father of a young daughter, Noel,
I have to tell you something.
The only thing that really matters here is,
are the kids gonna eat it?
Fair. How's it going? Parmesan cheese or ricotta?
Parmesan. You're not eating today?
I want the pasta. I can't get the pasta.
Are the kids gonna want to eat their vegetables? We're gonna leave you in suspense for a bit
because here's the thing. School lunch has a history. It is a rich history. It is a vivid
history. It is classic Americana.
And it's the purview of Jane Black.
She's a longtime food journalist who writes the newsletter Consumed, and she's sort of
an expert on school lunch.
We went to her house in D.C.
The history of school lunch is, I think, a really interesting case study.
When you look at the promises that Make America Healthy Again and RFK Junior are making, what they're promising to do,
which is take out all of these additives
and use simple ingredients, it should be really easy.
This idea that you just buy food and you cook it
and you give it to kids, it should be simple.
But it has never been simple.
And it's not only because of the money,
although that is a big piece of it,
it's also for historical reasons. School lunch is this weird little world, this complex upside down
and backwards world that is shaped by rules that were made for specific reasons at the time,
but that when you're trying to change things make it very difficult to
untangle and do something that just seems like common sense. And that's kind of why I love
school lunch because I love these wacky little places where you really have to get in there and
understand, you know, where the rubber's hitting the road, you know, what the problems are.
But to somebody just looking in from the outside, you're thinking,
the problems are. But to somebody just looking in from the outside, you're thinking, why can't they just do that?
Where do we start? If we're going to tell a history of school lunch in the United States,
where does it come from, the idea that if a kid goes to school, the school is going
to feed them?
So, there have always been hungry children in America, And the school lunch program is unofficially born during the depression.
And they were these ad hoc programs at different schools where children were in need. The government
helped out by providing money for this, but they also helped out by buying food from farmers,
because in the depression, they were struggling to sell the products that they needed. So the government
would buy these things in order to stabilize prices so that farmers also can make a living
and take that food and give it to schools. The program becomes formalized in 1946. It's called
the National School Lunch Act. It's signed by President Harry Truman and he says this
famous line when he, famous to school food nerds like me, when he signs the
bill that is, no nation is any healthier than its children or more prosperous
than its farmers. And so I think that's such an important line because this
program was never really only about children and nutrition.
The program always had two masters. And the fact that the program was controlled and directed by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture rather than say the Department of Education or the Department
of Health and Human Services shows who was really driving this program. It was agriculture.
I had always wondered that how Ag became so involved. And it's because, oh,
it always was involved in this thing. From the very beginning.
What's on the plate back in the earliest days?
You know, what's funny is it's not that different than the way we picture
school lunch right now.
You know, it's 1950s food.
Lunches are planned by a local school manager whose menus have taste appeal
and day-to-day variety.
A good lunch provides from a third to one half of the students' daily needs.
It's chicken, it's scoops of mashed potatoes,
you know, that you take out with the ice cream scoop.
Meats and other foods rich in protein,
a combination of fruits and vegetables,
bread, butter, milk.
In poorer schools, they may have not had a hot lunch.
They may have had a sandwich and an apple.
But I think that what you need to know about
school lunch at the beginning was that it was cooked in the schools. Okay, so it's not
processed food, a TV dinner that's brought in and just reheated and given to kids. There are lunch
ladies, they're cooking it and they're making it fresh and they're serving it to the kids.
A nutritious lunch helps a child stay alert
It helps teenagers make that final spurt of growth that develops them into healthy grown-ups
My husband who grew up in West Virginia always tells stories about when he was in elementary school
That you could smell the bread baking. Oh
And you know, what a lovely memory a lovely memory. Yes, he's not that old.
Right, no, he wouldn't be.
You're saying like within our lifetime.
This is something that was done on site.
And then, so the food is what we'd expected to be, no real surprises.
But then a change did come.
And it was at a point in American history when a lot of things were changing.
What happened?
Okay, so Reagan is elected president.
Ronald Reagan is elected president.
And the federal budget is out of control.
He comes in planning to slash budgets everywhere that he can.
It will propose budget cuts in virtually every department of government.
And school lunch is no exception.
And so they cut the budgets.
And the way that I often describe it to people is that schools are kind of a lot like families.
When a ton of your income disappears, what do you do?
You cut back, right? You have to cut costs.
And at this point in the 80s, the easiest way for them to do that is to get rid of the staff that are cooking, they have salaries.
They also, at that point, had pensions that people didn't really want to pay anymore.
So we'll get rid of the lunch ladies and we won't have to maintain all this equipment.
We won't have to have stoves and refrigerators and walk-ins.
We'll just get these suddenly available big food companies to make
all the food, package it, and bring it in.
That doesn't mean there was no cooking going on, but increasingly you see pre-prepared
foods and processed foods coming into schools because they're cheaper.
So we move from the bread is baking in the kitchen in West Virginia to what?
Well, I remember from the eighties, you know, there were tater tots,
which I loved. There were sloppy joes. And then Friday was pizza day.
Yes. Pizza day. And it was not a triangle. It was a square.
It was a square. And it had, you know, tomato sauce.
And then I always remember it was like the shredded cheese
that was kind of spackled on, like it had never moved.
But we loved it.
You picked up one edge and you could tear the whole thing off.
Exactly, exactly.
And so, you know, that's what there was.
Can't believe I'm actually going to consume a school hamburger.
What do you want these beef hearts?
On the floor.
It doesn't look very clean.
Just do your job, heart boy.
Sandwich, salvage all, salvage all.
And that's what kids got used to seeing.
Not only at school, but increasingly throughout society,
we all start eating a lot more processed foods,
and a lot more fast food, etc.
Coming up, Jane Black comes back to tell us what happened when we tried to make the kids
eat some vegetables. And what is a vegetable anyway?
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Food fight!
It's Today Explained, Miles Bryan and I are back with Jane Black.
She writes the Consumed Newsletter and has covered school lunch for many years.
So when we left off, American kids were getting mostly processed foods in their school lunch.
And then one woman risked it all.
The person who comes along and raises a ton of awareness about what's happening in school
food is Michelle Obama. And so when Obama is elected in 2008, Michelle Obama, like many first
ladies before her, sort of chooses an issue, right? You know, Nancy Reagan had, just say no to drugs.
Drugs. Say no to drugs and say yes to life. And Laura Bush was very focused on literacy.
Start by reading this book, one of my favorite books, Duck for President.
And Michelle Obama is going to focus on healthy eating and healthy kids.
And so a part of that is school lunch.
And so you've got her, you know, dancing with Elmo.
So how do you guys feel about getting kids pumped up
and excited about eating healthy food?
Elmo, it's wonderful. Elmo loves happy food.
You've got her bringing chefs to the White House
on the newly, you know, planted garden on the South Lawn.
Do you know what swish chard is?
It's like a green. It's like chard is? It's like a green.
It's like a color.
It's like a lettuce.
She's out there talking about how important school lunch
is to children, especially children who are hungry
and getting some of their most important calories of the day
and how it is essential to make those meals
as healthy as possible.
How does her advocacy go over?
So it really depends who you talk to.
Michelle Obama was a hero to so many liberals.
On the other hand, you then have the opposition, the Republicans, who are not into this at
all.
And there is no sign this morning that congressional Republicans are being swayed by first lady
Michelle Obama.
The decisions about the lunchroom should be made there, should be made with the parents in the
school district, not some bureaucrat in Washington D.C. I mean to them what Michelle Obama is doing
is the ultimate nanny state. She's saying here's what you can eat, I'm going to tell you what to eat,
you know, parents shouldn't have control, kids shouldn't have control. It was very much portrayed as if she was stepping
on parents' toes and telling them what they were allowed
to feed their kids.
The other piece of it that I think is worth mentioning
is that there was a big pushback,
partially from people in the school food world,
who were saying, hey, not so fast.
If we give kids quinoa and roasted vegetables, are they going to eat them?
They like pizza.
And pizza, which kids and all of us do love, kind of becomes a bit of a flashpoint here.
Remind us of this embarrassing chapter.
Yes, this was quite a moment. So one of the things that Michelle Obama and her team discover when
they dive into the school food nutrition rules is that one eighth of a cup of tomato paste,
that's about two tablespoons, and conveniently the amount that is on a piece of pizza
counts in school lunch world as half a vegetable.
Which is weird and they're able to say,
hey, wait a minute, look at this, something is wrong here.
Pizza is a vegetable.
Do you see how crazy this has become?
And she wrote an op-ed for the New York Times. It was somewhat snarky saying, you know,
remember when Congress declared that the sauce on a slice of pizza should count as a vegetable in
school lunches? Common sense. It's not a vegetable. What's next? Are Twinkies going to be considered
a vegetable? What was really crazy was that she lost that battle.
You know, the school lunch people, the food companies, the pizza makers get to
members of Congress and they're like, wait a minute, you are not going to say
that pizza doesn't count as a vegetable.
And they, they refused to let it happen.
I mean, just to complicate the story just a little bit,
I did talk to some nutritionists
and I think this is really interesting.
They didn't really object to the fact
that an eighth of a cup of tomato paste
does give you some nutrients.
In fact, they told me it is about the equivalent
of half an orange in terms of vitamins and nutrients.
What's crazy though is just how
quickly this was shut down. And I think it shows how powerful interests really have a hold on
the school lunch program and how difficult it is to make common sense changes.
So let me ask you lastly, you've laid out how school lunch
in a lot of ways illustrates what American priorities have
been for a century, right, since the Depression.
And we see how lunch becomes something
that is good for kids but also convenient for business.
In 2025, people like RFK and the Maha movement
that has aligned behind him,
they are starting to look very differently at not just school lunch,
but at the way we eat.
And it feels like we really are having a moment.
And I wonder, first, whether we are really having a moment.
And second, if we are, if this moment has real potential,
real promise.
I think we are having a moment.
I think there is a lot of energy behind the ideas
that he is putting out there, this new frame he's
putting out there about companies and powerful interests
taking advantage of us.
And that appeals both to Democrats and to Republicans
who feel it happening in this country. How you translate that energy into real change,
I think, is a big question. And I think that's why school lunch is a really good thing to talk
about it because it gives us this example. These things that seem like they should be simple
example, these things that seem like they should be simple are actually not that simple. And with school lunch, in order to really change it, in order to pull ultra processed
foods out of school lunch, I mean, that's making over the entire menu.
That's hiring thousands and thousands of people to cook in schools.
That's building thousands and thousands of school kitchens. That costs a lot of money.
So people have to put their money where their mouth is.
And I think it's the same thing when you look at a lot
of the other areas that the Maha movement
is talking about, right?
It's just not as easy.
They're talking about regulating ingredients
that they put in foods.
So again, a lot of these are good ideas,
but putting them into practice, it's a long haul.
Jane Black, the newsletter is consumed. Check it out. The long haul that Jane spoke of begins
in a place like Idea Charter School in Washington, where Red Rabbit is serving unprocessed meals
and where Miles and I set out to ask, will the youths eat real food?
Good, good, good, good. What is your name? Wesley Parr. Pleasure to meet you. Wesley
Parr? Parr. What y'all recording for?
We are doing a story about school lunch.
Oh, well.
Yeah.
Well, the one we're out here is some dog shit.
Oh, no.
It looks so good.
Yeah, it's the best you can get with government money.
How old are you?
18.
18.
I remember being 18.
They were giving us chicken nuggets, canned corn, canned green beans. This stuff is all fresh. 18. I remember being 18. They were giving us chicken nuggets, canned corn,
canned green beans. This stuff is all fresh. Yeah. Yeah, you're right. I'm probably just
complaining to complain because I'm a teenager. Yeah, what do I know?
What about you, sir? I'm impressed. What do you think? It's good, but I'm not gonna eat my vegetables.
Yeah, no. No. It's much better than old lunches, at least.
That's what I like about it.
What were the old ones like?
It was terrible. It didn't even look good.
What? Look like?
Sometimes it looked like sludge, and I wouldn't touch it.
I'm pretty sure I went the whole school year without eating the lunch back then.
Yeah, back then it was good to me.
Now I feel like it's more healthy, but
some days it's good, and other days it's
off days.
How important is healthy to you guys?
How important is it to, do you feel like
to be eating unprocessed foods
and vegetables, things like that?
I mean, it's good.
We gotta watch out big years, you know?
But sometimes, just be eating anything.
Watch our figures, you know? But sometimes, we just be eating anything.
Okay, here we go.
Here we go.
First impressions.
All right, we got spaghetti.
Whole wheat, we got meat sauce.
It's good.
It's a lot of flavor. There's spices in it.
It's garlic, basil, rosemary.
That is really good. Very nice. The whole wheat's a nice touch. The whole wheat's a nice touch.
Thank you to Idea Charter School in Northeast D.C., Wesley Parr, Jamar Jackson, Latia Gregory, and Kiara Roundtree.
Thanks, kids.
Today's show was produced by...
Me, Miles Bryant.
Jolie Myers is our editor, Laura Bullard fact-checked the show, Patrick Boyd, and Andrea Christensdottir
are our engineers.
It's Today Explained.
I'm a historian. I'd like to explore mostly. I usually like to learn about the Gilded Age
and learn more and
more about Appalachia mostly.
College next year?
Possibly.
Don't play around college.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So you Gilded Age and Appalachia, those are your interests?
Yeah. Amazon Pharmacy presents Painful Thoughts.
The guy in front of me in the pharmacy line is halfway through an incredibly detailed
17 minute story about his gout, a story likely more painful than the gout itself.
Next time, save yourself the pain and let Amazon Pharmacy deliver your meds right to your door.
Amazon Pharmacy. Healthcare just got less painful.