@@angelolagrutta4679 That was a meme btw. Not true at all. The funniest part is that while trying to prove we're so dumb, that we'd believe that, you made yourself look even dumber by buying into it.
Deokkyu Choi fast food does nothing against hunger, eat one burger from MCD, Wendy's or something, you won't be full, eat one homemade one and you are , same price, just a little work and much better quality
@@maxtsoe Food deserts are a myth and healthy diets are cheap diets. This is 100% ignorance. These kids have dumbass lazy parents who can't be bothered to go grocery shopping.
joshua powell well I'm from Austria and I think we're a pretty "natural" country so we do not really have that problem here but there are more and more food chains from the us coming to Austria and people are becoming fatter so yeah idk
yes, but they picked a location where none of the kids have ever seen a farm and eat processed foods, there are many places in america that would laugh at his questions and get them 100% correct per child not only as a whole class getting them correct. It's about making good TV, not showing general knowledge of americans
When I was doing my student teaching in a poor rural area in Southwest Virginia, many students did not have access to fresh vegetables at home. The school had just gotten a grant to help increase healthy eating. So every other day, there would be a 'snack'. Usually a fruit, or vegetable. Generally it was things that the kids were familiar with. They knew what an apple was,orange, banana, celery, or carrot looked like. One day we got plums. This was a revolution for these students. Not a one of them had ever seen, heard, or tasted a plum. Some of the vegetables that Jamie Oliver held up, like the eggplant, or beet, I could see the students totally missing; even with television editing.
When I was in pre school well over 30 years ago the teachers would blindfold us and then put a piece of fruit in our mouths, it's obvious that have never happened in any school in the u.s of a
That’s kind of what I thought it would be like somehow :) I must say that as a migrant kid I had to learn things like celery cause we just didn’t use that in our kitchen. But I knew other things like purslane, green pre-rips plums, figs, gulthead seabream and more :) but these things were just not appreciated cause I’m a migrant and I’m supposed to be dumb 😂
@@CanaryCaia Appalachia, VA. Plums aren't one of the things that are easily found there. (at least in that part of Appalachia) they grow there, but clearly my students didn't have access to them. They may have had more access to a paw paw, rather than a plum.
Can't wait to see this series. I remember being very young helping mom/dad in the vegetable garden. Most kids don't get that kind of opportunity, living in cities. Kids today are raised on commercial manufactured packaged food and never get to see raw food. Join the "Grow a Row" movement, where you grow an extra row of vegetables to donate to food banks. And if you don't garden, seriously consider it this year, even if all you have are a few planting containers on a balcony.
Would be totally different in New Zealand. Not only would pretty much all of them recognising and regularly eat them, they'd also be asking to take some home for mum.
"Egg..." "Egg salad!" Well that sums up what the parents feed their kids. And that's sad. We grew up with parents who cooked everything and fast food and processed food was a treat.
This is really sad, but really true. If kids are only given prepackaged processed food, they never learn what real things look like. My brother dated a woman whose 6 yr old son didn't know what an orange was. He knew orange juice, orane popsicle, "orange" the color, but not the fruit itself. My family was blown away! This was in St. Louis, Missouri. And every child SHOULD know what a tomato, a potato, and celery look like!
This happened in my cooking classes all the time!! Kids sniffing their way into my class pointing at a zucchini going, "What's that?" Because I grew kale in my garden, on field trips to farms, by age 3, my own kids could tell the difference between kale & spinach, much to the shock of the farmers. It's why I do what I do now. Survival of the fittest!
I find it difficult to believe that not one of the kids knew what ANY of the vegetables are. Wouldn't some of the kids have at least seen Veggie Tales cartoons? Also, don't reading books have pictures of common items to show kids words that start with different letters? Knowing how "reality" TV edits the heck out of footage to create storylines, I have my doubts about this scene. When the little boy acts dumbfounded about the tomatoes (:46), you can see a bunch of kids raising their hands in the background. They knew. This just looks like the product of editing done to move along the story and set the stage for what he wanted to show. I don't buy it.
WOW! This is the parents and the school systems fault. My daughter is only 3 and she knows all of those vegetables except for egg plant and beets. Even if all these kids do at home is watch tv they can learn these things. Pocyo, Peppa Pig, Team Ummi Zummi, Bubble Guppies. The list of educational cartoons is endless.
I remember Jamie visiting a college and a student thought chocolate came from oil rigs! Three photos of which one was a coca bean and I forget what the third was. Jamie actually stalled in shock before regaining his composure. This doesn't surprise me but it is very upsetting to watch
As a resident of this country, especially one that has substituted at schools in the past, I can safely say this is disturbingly accurate. It sickens me to see my fellow citizens say they're superior when they cannot raise their children to identify basic vegetables. America, you fill me with shame.
To be fair, beetroot and eggplant are not used as often in the US as in Europe and 6-year-olds are struggling to know what anything is, much less food. They're learning their alphabet and how to write and add and subtract at that stage, at best. What IS worrying is that they know tomato ketchup/catsup and not tomatoes...that is, brand names, not food names, which is Jamie Oliver's point. Kudos to him for identifying the problem and doing something about it. Now it's down to everyone to make sure children are taught facts, not propaganda, in the US and Europe.
Uhhhh.... tomato ketchup/catsup is a product of tomatoes, not a brand name. Still, it's troubling that they recognize processed foods but not the vegetables they come from. Of course, I was older than that when I went "Oh, yeah, duh. I guess ketchup is made from tomatoes, isn't it?" but at least I knew what tomatoes WERE and what they tasted like fresh!
thank you! this is the kind of person we need commenting on these videos, not some idiot complaining that a nervous preschooler can't identify a tomato
Many kids in urban settings don't know because their parents do involve them in the purchase and preparing of vegetables. Also they purchase premade processed foods like instant potatoes. One of my adult niece's friends ate dinner at my mom's house. She had never had mashed potatoes from scratch. She was amazed at how much better they tasted.
Wow...I remember back in 1998 being in first grade and we weren't even allowed to leave the cafeteria until we ate all our veggies. When we would leave we had to show Mr.Mathis our tray and if it had healthy stuff still on it we were sent back until it was gone...
I was really surprised by this. I'm certainly not a vegetarian, but I'm a pretty healthy eater, and my freakin' 3-year-old daughter even knows what a kiwi is!! The ironic thing is that NONE of the kids in this class knew what a tomato was, but the people who live there were up in arms and ready to burn Jamie at the stake over a newspaper article stated that he said that they were fat and ignorant!! LOL!! I guess the truth hurts!!
Nothing surprises me when it comes to american ignorance, if Jamie would have asked these kids or the teens a question like this one Jamie: What is the most important part of a sandwich, that you can simply not make sandwich without it? If these kids or the teens would have responded with "I don't know" or "the cheese" or "the bacon" I would gone for a facepalm out shear annoyance but I wouldn't be surprised.
Battery eggs are not 'processed foods'. They are sold as they are when laid. Not processed. Also, you may not realise that one of the many campaigns Oliver has run in the UK has targeted battery farming. He's actively trying to get that outlawed, and obviously never uses battery eggs. I don't know what you mean by 'refined flour'. Flour is made of ground up wheat.
Wow wow wow. It's schoking. What a difference with his visit in the school lunches in italy (you can see the video on youtube) where all kids knew the vegetables.
@capchio jesusland is the american south and midwest; generally everything that isn't hawaii, washington, oregon, california, minnesota, wisconsin, michigan, illinois, pennsylvania, new york, and all of new england.
How can people have become so cut off the true things and the real life ?? All these kids are still looking healthy. But what are they going to look like in 20 or 30 years, eating only processed food ?... This man is an eye opener !
If you notice, when he asks the kids what the different vegetables are, he seems to specifically ask the kids who DON'T have their hands up. Pause at 0:45, there's a myriad of kids eager to answer and he chooses the one kid who clearly doesn't have a clue. But then, their lack of knowledge about food doesn't really say much. I'm sure the kids probably couldn't differentiate between the ingredients in fattening food as well. But come on, at that age their biggest concern is when recess is
I agree with the thought that kids should be fed better quality & nutritious foods at school. Having said that, Jamie made a comment that was very disturbing to me in this episode. He said that the government should not "allow parents to feed their children this rubbish", talking about fries, sloppy joes, etc. I don't want a government that interferes in our lives to the point that we are told what to eat & when to eat it. Just another example of the chipping away of our freedom of choice.
I believe that yes, they did ignore the kids who might have known what they were, simply for the broadcast. HOWEVER, I am not surprised that there are a majority of children who do not know what the veggies were. It seems the majority of kids are eating food not necessarily freshly prepared and being told what everything is or watching it made. They may get salsa, or ketchup or marinara but never actually see a tomato before it goes through any process.
although the cauliflower and the beet were a little on the tough side since a lot of people dont cook with either one and they resemble broccoli and turnips. There is almost no excuse why a 6 year old does not know what a tomato or potato is. Especially if they are used in their daily cooking. I could be wrong however, the only fries I had as a kid were homecooked. My mashed potatoes never came out a box. Broccoli was my favorite food. (i hated tomatoes though) My dad loved to cook for me.
That kid was soo proud to stand up and shout EGG SALAD
I seriously doubt that it's like this everywhere in America
7% of America thinks chocolate milk comes from brown cows
@@angelolagrutta4679 wait, what's wrong with that ?
@steven morty at least that kid used logic to answer a question he didn't know the answer for
@@angelolagrutta4679 That was a meme btw. Not true at all. The funniest part is that while trying to prove we're so dumb, that we'd believe that, you made yourself look even dumber by buying into it.
This is actually depressing.
+Zerga L. Try hilarious
Thank goodness I didn't move to the usa
Twisttid World ikr
Imagine Gordon made that revolution 😂
The parents should be there too. Would like to see their faces.
Deokkyu Choi fast food does nothing against hunger, eat one burger from MCD, Wendy's or something, you won't be full, eat one homemade one and you are
, same price, just a little work and much better quality
Adam Toth but than they would have needed the gymnasium
Deokkyu Choi they don’t even know what a tomato looks like! That’s not poverty that’s ignorance
youre assuming the parents have a positive IQ.
@@maxtsoe Food deserts are a myth and healthy diets are cheap diets. This is 100% ignorance. These kids have dumbass lazy parents who can't be bothered to go grocery shopping.
The "egg salad!" kid is my favorite
Whoa! How is this possible???
EGG SALAD?!?!?!?!??!?!? SERIOUSLY??
+Dori C I LAUGH MY HEAD OFF AT EGG SALAD!
I'M LAUGHING SO HARD AT HOW HE JUST JUMPED UP OUT OF HIS SEAT
looooooooooooool
Ryse
son of Rome
Yeah stupid kid! It is an ostrich egg!
Is this real? I live in europe and every three year old here would know what those vegetables are.
joshua powell yeah at least the basics u know...but the situation in america is insane
joshua powell
well I'm from Austria and I think we're a pretty "natural" country so we do not really have that problem here but there are more and more food chains from the us coming to Austria and people are becoming fatter so yeah idk
joshua powell "would of", "countrys", "obeasity". Really?!
joshua powell Hold up.. That's a turnip? Lol, thought it was a radish. They look similar tbh
The Fashion Because it is a beet!
R.I.P future generations.
These Kids are like 10 now, and probably still stupid lmao
@@Zach135 playing fortnite
Is this in usa? I cant believe that these children don't even know what a tomato is.
West Virgina though. Kids in Minnesota would (hopefully) ace this or at least know about 80%
Claudia B Ofc its USA
their parents never eat them
yes, but they picked a location where none of the kids have ever seen a farm and eat processed foods, there are many places in america that would laugh at his questions and get them 100% correct per child not only as a whole class getting them correct. It's about making good TV, not showing general knowledge of americans
@@darkquail2003 These are the kids that need it the most though so he is in the right place
Gosh I feel bad for those kids, what are they eating at home?
Fastfood...
Doug Bolster McDonald's
Canned fooda
Fucking sad food bought by their pathetic parents
I bet they know what a McDonald's logo is
Inorganic Vegan you again!
+Ashley Casey lol of course they know what mcdonalds is!
E G G S A L A D
Anthony Cortes yummy yummy, eggsalad.
EGG XACTLY ... embarassing
When I was doing my student teaching in a poor rural area in Southwest Virginia, many students did not have access to fresh vegetables at home. The school had just gotten a grant to help increase healthy eating. So every other day, there would be a 'snack'. Usually a fruit, or vegetable. Generally it was things that the kids were familiar with. They knew what an apple was,orange, banana, celery, or carrot looked like. One day we got plums. This was a revolution for these students. Not a one of them had ever seen, heard, or tasted a plum.
Some of the vegetables that Jamie Oliver held up, like the eggplant, or beet, I could see the students totally missing; even with television editing.
When I was in pre school well over 30 years ago the teachers would blindfold us and then put a piece of fruit in our mouths, it's obvious that have never happened in any school in the u.s of a
Jamie oliver did the same test with young school kids in Italy, in a poor region. They knew all the vegetables.
That’s kind of what I thought it would be like somehow :) I must say that as a migrant kid I had to learn things like celery cause we just didn’t use that in our kitchen. But I knew other things like purslane, green pre-rips plums, figs, gulthead seabream and more :) but these things were just not appreciated cause I’m a migrant and I’m supposed to be dumb 😂
What do you call rural? How a kid from a rural area could not know plums?
@@CanaryCaia Appalachia, VA. Plums aren't one of the things that are easily found there. (at least in that part of Appalachia) they grow there, but clearly my students didn't have access to them. They may have had more access to a paw paw, rather than a plum.
Can't wait to see this series. I remember being very young helping mom/dad in the vegetable garden. Most kids don't get that kind of opportunity, living in cities. Kids today are raised on commercial manufactured packaged food and never get to see raw food. Join the "Grow a Row" movement, where you grow an extra row of vegetables to donate to food banks. And if you don't garden, seriously consider it this year, even if all you have are a few planting containers on a balcony.
These are not even difficult this is so sad
To be fair the eggplant was a little complex but agreed on the difficulty part but not on the "sad" part.
Alexa stfu
"Oh tomato ketchup I know that one"🤠
EGG SALAD!!!!!!!
"I'll give you the first word, Egg"... "EGG SALAD"
That made me laugh way more than it should have!
Would be totally different in New Zealand. Not only would pretty much all of them recognising and regularly eat them, they'd also be asking to take some home for mum.
This is really sad
Rose Noire
I've never been to the US so I wouldn't know
Alexa stfu
"Egg..." "Egg salad!" Well that sums up what the parents feed their kids. And that's sad. We grew up with parents who cooked everything and fast food and processed food was a treat.
I fucking died when the kid thought an eggplant was a pear. A fucking pear.
The kid who said broccoli had the right idea. Completely off, but had the idea
Well they are related vegetables.
in italy they are both broccoli tbh
There is some hope for that kid, I teach plant ID so I find this really disturbing
I mean cauliflower is pretty much white broccoli right?
Jk
the kid at 0:59 is my boyfriend now 😭 i’ve been cracking up at this since the day he showed it to me
Really ? 😂
Are y’all still together?
look at 1:18, the child is afraid of jamie oliver. So funny.
This is really sad, but really true. If kids are only given prepackaged processed food, they never learn what real things look like. My brother dated a woman whose 6 yr old son didn't know what an orange was. He knew orange juice, orane popsicle, "orange" the color, but not the fruit itself. My family was blown away! This was in St. Louis, Missouri.
And every child SHOULD know what a tomato, a potato, and celery look like!
This happened in my cooking classes all the time!! Kids sniffing their way into my class pointing at a zucchini going, "What's that?" Because I grew kale in my garden, on field trips to farms, by age 3, my own kids could tell the difference between kale & spinach, much to the shock of the farmers. It's why I do what I do now. Survival of the fittest!
Can anyone tell me which episode has the full clip of this? Would save me a lot of time! Thanks
It's the first episode of Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution.
I was just thinking...
Was i so stupid too when I was 6?!
I find it difficult to believe that not one of the kids knew what ANY of the vegetables are. Wouldn't some of the kids have at least seen Veggie Tales cartoons? Also, don't reading books have pictures of common items to show kids words that start with different letters? Knowing how "reality" TV edits the heck out of footage to create storylines, I have my doubts about this scene. When the little boy acts dumbfounded about the tomatoes (:46), you can see a bunch of kids raising their hands in the background. They knew. This just looks like the product of editing done to move along the story and set the stage for what he wanted to show. I don't buy it.
I am one of the kids in the video
+Tyler Brumfield
whats your opinion on this clip, years later?
WOW! This is the parents and the school systems fault. My daughter is only 3 and she knows all of those vegetables except for egg plant and beets. Even if all these kids do at home is watch tv they can learn these things. Pocyo, Peppa Pig, Team Ummi Zummi, Bubble Guppies. The list of educational cartoons is endless.
Deep down I know this is sad but I couldn't help but laugh the whole time
MURICAAAAA
I remember Jamie visiting a college and a student thought chocolate came from oil rigs! Three photos of which one was a coca bean and I forget what the third was. Jamie actually stalled in shock before regaining his composure. This doesn't surprise me but it is very upsetting to watch
As a resident of this country, especially one that has substituted at schools in the past, I can safely say this is disturbingly accurate. It sickens me to see my fellow citizens say they're superior when they cannot raise their children to identify basic vegetables. America, you fill me with shame.
This was truly depressing. They don't need to know them all, but not being able to correctly identify a tomato or a potato was mind-boggling.
EGGSALAD!! hahaha that enthusiastic little boy is so cute. i want to hug him and teach him how to eat proper food.
are you ok ?
"oh tomato ketchup? I know that one." That kid was adorable!
died at "Egg salad"
Ohh Tomato Ketchup! I know that one! Cute kids.
Of course this was shot in West Virginia, the second fattest and unhealthy state
Thank god for Mississippi
Yes yes of course, bet the other states are doing just fine
This is America! Well done!
Gosh, I'm glad I live in Norway!
To be fair, beetroot and eggplant are not used as often in the US as in Europe and 6-year-olds are struggling to know what anything is, much less food. They're learning their alphabet and how to write and add and subtract at that stage, at best. What IS worrying is that they know tomato ketchup/catsup and not tomatoes...that is, brand names, not food names, which is Jamie Oliver's point. Kudos to him for identifying the problem and doing something about it. Now it's down to everyone to make sure children are taught facts, not propaganda, in the US and Europe.
Uhhhh.... tomato ketchup/catsup is a product of tomatoes, not a brand name. Still, it's troubling that they recognize processed foods but not the vegetables they come from. Of course, I was older than that when I went "Oh, yeah, duh. I guess ketchup is made from tomatoes, isn't it?" but at least I knew what tomatoes WERE and what they tasted like fresh!
eggplant is used all the time in America! In most other places its called aubergine, so when you hear it called eggplant, you know its American.
A long way to go Jamie. Good job.
oh you just have to love the kid who said egg salad! lol
Jamie also went to an italien school and all the kids knew all vegetables. Here it's very shocking.
@Fumfig hahahahahahahah lol i nearly had a heart attack with your comment XD
Omg these people are in my classes 😅😅😅
thank you! this is the kind of person we need commenting on these videos, not some idiot complaining that a nervous preschooler can't identify a tomato
Those kids need to watch Veggietales.
Canned food is easier to prepare, and fresh food is pretty expensive for many families. This is the result
Many kids in urban settings don't know because their parents do involve them in the purchase and preparing of vegetables. Also they purchase premade processed foods like instant potatoes. One of my adult niece's friends ate dinner at my mom's house. She had never had mashed potatoes from scratch. She was amazed at how much better they tasted.
+Donna Blancett premashed potato in grocery store taste like crap
God bless America.....please! They really need it!
man...when the kid that said "Egg Salad" gets older and looks back on this.... lol
LMFAO IMAGINEEEEEE💀
He did the same experiment in the UK and got similar answers from the kids.
This was hilarious!
I live in the United States and I can confirm everybody above the age of 1 and a half knows what a tomato is.
+Camille Johnson So, you know everybody who lives in United States?
Yes. I am the powerful and almighty.
+Camille Johnson lol
But this specific town has children who don't.
If ignorance is bliss......america is blessed beyond believe.
Wow...I remember back in 1998 being in first grade and we weren't even allowed to leave the cafeteria until we ate all our veggies. When we would leave we had to show Mr.Mathis our tray and if it had healthy stuff still on it we were sent back until it was gone...
I was really surprised by this. I'm certainly not a vegetarian, but I'm a pretty healthy eater, and my freakin' 3-year-old daughter even knows what a kiwi is!! The ironic thing is that NONE of the kids in this class knew what a tomato was, but the people who live there were up in arms and ready to burn Jamie at the stake over a newspaper article stated that he said that they were fat and ignorant!! LOL!! I guess the truth hurts!!
Nothing surprises me when it comes to american ignorance, if Jamie would have asked these kids or the teens a question like this one
Jamie: What is the most important part of a sandwich, that you can simply not make sandwich without it? If these kids or the teens would have responded with "I don't know" or "the cheese" or "the bacon" I would gone for a facepalm out shear annoyance but I wouldn't be surprised.
0:59 "Oh, tomato ketchup? I know about one." That's so sad... Most kids know tomato ketchup but they don't know fresh tomato.
THE KID WHO TOOK A WHIFF OF THE TOMATO HOLY CRAP I DIED
nice. really really nice.
*bangs head on the keyboard
what does he gesture that expression when he says i love working with kids at 0:30
@cheskamouse
West Virginia isn't in the midwest. . . it's in the south. Nnless your referring to some sort of list of areas I've never heard of. . .
Battery eggs are not 'processed foods'. They are sold as they are when laid. Not processed. Also, you may not realise that one of the many campaigns Oliver has run in the UK has targeted battery farming. He's actively trying to get that outlawed, and obviously never uses battery eggs. I don't know what you mean by 'refined flour'. Flour is made of ground up wheat.
God bless America.
Glad I was obsessed with tomatoes back then, still am
"egg"..............."egg salad!" lol
me too!
Wow wow wow. It's schoking. What a difference with his visit in the school lunches in italy (you can see the video on youtube) where all kids knew the vegetables.
@capchio jesusland is the american south and midwest; generally everything that isn't hawaii, washington, oregon, california, minnesota, wisconsin, michigan, illinois, pennsylvania, new york, and all of new england.
That explains a lot.
@totallymangled Thank you so much :)
How can people have become so cut off the true things and the real life ?? All these kids are still looking healthy. But what are they going to look like in 20 or 30 years, eating only processed food ?... This man is an eye opener !
My three year old would know those vegetables.
When you know almost every kid in the video because you go to school with them 💀
I literally think about this at least once a week (for years since i saw it) it's devastating to me 😢
That's the point he's trying to make. The parents should have taught them this by feeding it to them.
@ForeverAnalog
Right. I didn't remember exactly where in the Virginias it was filmed; apologies.
hahahahahaha, potato lol
If you notice, when he asks the kids what the different vegetables are, he seems to specifically ask the kids who DON'T have their hands up. Pause at 0:45, there's a myriad of kids eager to answer and he chooses the one kid who clearly doesn't have a clue.
But then, their lack of knowledge about food doesn't really say much. I'm sure the kids probably couldn't differentiate between the ingredients in fattening food as well. But come on, at that age their biggest concern is when recess is
*takes off glasses* My God!!!
This depresses me.. deeply. My own home state. This is what it's turned into.
1:29 😂😂😂
I agree with the thought that kids should be fed better quality & nutritious foods at school. Having said that, Jamie made a comment that was very disturbing to me in this episode. He said that the government should not "allow parents to feed their children this rubbish", talking about fries, sloppy joes, etc.
I don't want a government that interferes in our lives to the point that we are told what to eat & when to eat it. Just another example of the chipping away of our freedom of choice.
I only missed the beetroot. It's rare in Korea.
I believe that yes, they did ignore the kids who might have known what they were, simply for the broadcast. HOWEVER, I am not surprised that there are a majority of children who do not know what the veggies were. It seems the majority of kids are eating food not necessarily freshly prepared and being told what everything is or watching it made. They may get salsa, or ketchup or marinara but never actually see a tomato before it goes through any process.
O M G .. this is really leaving me speechless
although the cauliflower and the beet were a little on the tough side since a lot of people dont cook with either one and they resemble broccoli and turnips. There is almost no excuse why a 6 year old does not know what a tomato or potato is. Especially if they are used in their daily cooking. I could be wrong however, the only fries I had as a kid were homecooked. My mashed potatoes never came out a box. Broccoli was my favorite food. (i hated tomatoes though) My dad loved to cook for me.
"EGG SALAD!!!!". Wow... Just wow.
When you realize your a chef in the special ed class
Wow, just look at them when he unfolds the vegetables. They are like "HOLY SHIT! IT's POISON!!!"
1st grade, i remember knowing basic fruits and vegetables by First Grade!
Nobody:
The entire Universe:
This Class: eGg SaLaD!!!
Incroyable
A tomato is a Potato? LoL! They should have know that by that age! I'm 15 and I knew every piece of food he showed.
Not everything is responsability of teachers or educational institutions. There is such a thing called good and responsable parenting.
Today I learned that egg salads are pretty big, long and dark colored vegetables