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Good Life Michelle gets her hands dirty as she picks White House vegetables with school children
http://www.mailonsunday.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1193674/Good-Life-Michelle-gets-hands-dirty-picks-White-House-peas-lettuce-school-children.html
By Mail Foreign Service Last updated at 2:11 PM on 17th June 2009
Greenfingered: Michelle Obama digs up vegetables at the White House with the help of some school children
Role model: The first lady shells sugar snap peas under supervision of White House chef Sam Kass
Michelle helps set the table: The school children's visit was part of a project to make them conscious of healthy eating
Lunch is served: The party ate chicken and brown rice with the vegetables they had picked
[size=1.2em]There can't be many First Ladies who would be prepared to get their hands dirty for a White House photo opportunity.
[size=1.2em]Then again, Michelle Obama has constantly proved she isn't an ordinary First Lady.
[size=1.2em]
[size=1.2em]The mother-of-two welcomed a group of school children to the White House garden to pick lettuce and peas they helped plant in the spring.
[size=1.2em]The harvest was the culmination of an ongoing project with Bancroft Elementary School.
[size=1.2em]Many of the students had helped the first lady to plant the vegetable garden in April. She, in turn, had visited the garden at their school in Washington last month.
[size=1.2em]Mrs Obama knelt in the dirt and supervised the children in cutting several varieties of lettuce. She also demonstrated the pleasure of eating raw sweet peas.
[size=1.2em]'It tastes great doesn't it when the vegetables are fresh?' she asked. 'We all have to have vegetables every single day, every day.'
[size=1.2em]Together the group harvested 73-pounds of lettuce and 12-pounds of peas from the 1,100-square-foot, L-shaped plot on the South Lawn.
[size=1.2em]Assistant White House chef Sam Kass said the garden has also produced beans, kale, collard greens, chard and herbs. He said the kitchen had been serving the beans from the garden every other day and herbs every night.
[size=1.2em]Later Mrs Obama joined several of the children in the gleaming stainless steel White House kitchen, where she helped shell the newly harvested peas for a healthy meal. Other children assisted the White House chefs in preparing brown rice and baked chicken.
[size=1.2em]Outside other fifth-graders made salad using the newly picked lettuce and decorated cupcakes baked with honey instead of sugar.
[size=1.2em]Then the first lady helped set picnic tables for the meal, which she called a reward for their gardening.
[size=1.2em]'Today is really the culmination of a lot of hard work,' she said.
[size=1.2em]Mrs Obama said she hopes the garden project educated parents and children across the country about the importance of fruits and vegetables.
[size=1.2em]'Too many kids are consuming high-calorie food with low nutritional value, and they're not getting enough exercise,' she said.
[size=1.2em]'My hope is that this garden, through it we can continue to make the connection between what we eat and how we feel and how healthy we are.'
[size=1.2em]She said adding more fresh produce to her family's diet made them all feel more energetic.
[size=1.2em]The first lady acknowledged that fresh fruits and vegetables are difficult for families in some urban and rural communities to obtain.
[size=1.2em]She praised community garden projects for 'taking matters into their own hands.' |
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