NY Elementary School Cafeteria Goes 100% Vegetarian

Public School 244 is the first elementary school in New York to adopt an all-vegetarian menu, with animal-welfare group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals saying it might be the first veggie-only public elementary school in the nation.

Of course, the transition didn’t happen overnight. When the school opened in 2008, the cafeteria began serving vegetarian meals three days a week.

“We then started to try out recipes with small groups of students, see what they liked, see what they didn’t like,” the school’s Principal and Co-Founder Bob Groff told ABC News. The recipes turned out to be a hit, according to Groff, and the feedback from students encouraged the staff to expand meat-free meals to four days a week. Eventually, the school adopted an all-vegetarian menu in January.

So what’s for lunch? The kids get an array of creative and healthy options from tofu vegetable wraps to black bean and cheddar quesadillas with a side of salsa and roasted red potatoes. No questionable mystery meat or cardboard Cheez Whiz pizza here.

Of course, if the students don’t dig the new grub, they’re still welcome to bring their own lunches containing meat. Phew.

 H/T + Photo Courtesy of Animal

More content

CultureProducts
Coffee mate Set To Release Thai Iced Coffee And Pina Colada Creamers
The White Lotus, the popular HBO series about quirky rich folks, has teamed with Coffee mate to release luxury-inspired creamers ahead of Season 3’s premiere.…
,
Products
Here’s How You Can Score A Liquid Death Hot Tub
  Liquid Death, the “Murder Your Thirst” brand, has made a name for itself in the CPG world with its bold marketing, unique positioning, attention-grabbing…
,
CultureEating Out
Phoenix Suns Unveil $2 Value Menu, Claim NBA’s Most Affordable Stadium Experience
Next time you hit Phoenix, Arizona’s Footprint Center for a Suns game, you’ll be walking into “the most affordable [stadium] in the NBA.” According to…
,
Burger
We Deliver!

Enter your email address below and we'll deliver our top stories straight to your inbox