Showing posts with label ANJEE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ANJEE. Show all posts

Monday, February 16, 2015

Squash Out the Snow

January has been all about Spaghetti Squash!
Who doesn't love a warm bowl of spaghetti with tomato sauce on a cold winter day?


 Photo Credit: http://steamykitchen.com/11285-baked-spaghetti-squash-with-garlic-and-butter.html
A picture of the delectable squash 

Photo Credit: http://www.countryfarm-lifestyles.com/images/growing-spaghetti-squash.jpg
In the garden, squash grows on vines

This past January, in each of our Living Lab programs our students cooked up some spaghetti squash.

The three objectives for our lessons were:
-learning how to cook a seasonal vegetable
-tasting a new and different type of vegetable
-trying and tasting a vegetable they will plant in the spring

Believe it or not, spaghetti squash is seasonal in the wintertime. Squash can be planted in late spring, harvested in the fall and if stored in a cool dry place, can store up to three months. When cooking with our students, we try to choose a seasonal vegetable; it is important to teach them when vegetables are ready in New Jersey.

Besides being a seasonal vegetable, spaghetti squash is very healthy for you.  The squash can be eaten like regular pasta but has way fewer calories. A 1-cup serving of cooked spaghetti squash has 42 calories, while 1 cup of cooked pasta has 221 calories. Spaghetti squash also has more vitamin A and C and potassium than pasta. Switch out regular pasta spaghetti for some spaghetti squash and you are eating guilt-free vegetable pasta! 

Photo Credit: http://www.modernalternativekitchen.com/2013/08/roasted-spaghetti-squash-seeds/#.VN5qVebF8kk
Inside of a spaghetti squash

Photo Credit: http://www.homesteadanywhere.com/kitchen/how-to-cook-a-spaghetti-squash/
Scooping out, the "spaghetti” of the spaghetti squash 


Here is the recipe we used with our classes:

Spaghetti Squash with Tomatoes

Ingredients:
1 cooked spaghetti squash
1 medium onion, chopped (1/2 cup)
1 green pepper, chopped (1/2 cup)
1 large garlic clove, chopped
2 tablespoons olive oil
4 tomatoes, chopped (4 cups)
1/4 teaspoon dried oregano
1/4 teaspoon dried basil
Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons butter
1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese

Directions:
-Cut the Squash into 4 quarters and microwave the quarter pieces of squash in the microwave for 4-6 minutes
-While the squash is cooking, sauté onion, green pepper and garlic in olive oil over medium heat until tender (about 5 minutes)
-Stir in tomatoes, salt and pepper, oregano and basil. Simmer together about 5 minutes more.
-Use a spoon to remove the seeds from the squash and a fork to remove the strands of spaghetti from the skin of the squash.
-Toss the strands with butter and tomato mixture. Top with Parmesan cheese. 

Recipe from: http://www.food.com/recipe/spaghetti-squash-with-tomatoes-410089



Photo Credit: http://steamykitchen.com/19385-microwave-spaghetti-squash-with-tomatoes-and-basil.html
Picture of the Finished Product


Kids Reactions:

"Am I really eating a vegetable? This is delicious!"

"I do not know if I want any." Tries a tiny bit, ends up eating all of it and then asks for seconds. (Priceless!)

"Can we make squash every week?"

We will be planting spaghetti squash in our school gardens this spring and next fall we hope to have grown our very own spaghetti squashes. The students then will have a lesson that has come full circle. 

Go ahead, grow your own squash or find one at your local grocery store and make your own bowl of healthy spaghetti! Its kid approved!

Squash nutrition facts from the following websites:

http://www.livestrong.com/article/541917-nutrition-of-spaghetti-squash-vs-pasta

http://healthyeating.sfgate.com/nutrition-spaghetti-squash-vs-pasta-1817.html

http://www.newhealthguide.org/Spaghetti-Squash-Nutrition.html






Sunday, January 29, 2012

School Gardeners Plant Roots at ANJEE conference

On January 27-28, New Jersey's environmental education community came together to learn and share and be inspired at the annual Alliance of New Jersey Environmental Educators conference in Plainsboro.
The two days were great for many reasons but the most inspiring event was the 45 minute "School Garden Roundtable".  It really could have been a day in itself, (and should be!) and brought out a large, diverse group of committed folks involved with school gardens.
Clearly school gardening is a HOT TOPIC and there were all sorts of gardens with all sorts of missions and models springing up all over.  From extensive all organic fully curriculum-integrated gardens at the Willow School to stretching and striving, scrappy urban gardens in Newark (that's us!) people are seeing to power of school gardens to activate learners and shift kids food choices.