How French kids eat: typical French meals for kids! | Edukale


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How French kids eat: typical french meals for kids! ➤ 8 simple steps to figure out healthy eating FREE WEBINAR: …

18 replies
  1. ingrid
    ingrid says:

    👋 fabulous video!!!!! So much needed! Your vids have helped me so much Lucie💜plan balanced meals, etc keep up the great work👍👍its pitiful here in the US the kids menus in restaurants are never healthy. Fish sticks with fries, grilled cheese with chips, etc why not offer a mini portion of meatloaf with potatoes and vegetables? Restaurants take heed here! One reason America is a sickly nation. Young parents reading this stop now feeding your kiddos junk. Just order an extra healthy entree for your toddler, then take the rest home for the next day. 🙏💜from California 🏝️🌸ps: your skin looks so luminous plz do an updated skincare routine video

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  2. Matcam
    Matcam says:

    Loving your videos. Was wondering if you can give an idea of how much you eat of each food group. Example, fruits per day, veggies, etc….let's say for an adult women, what should she shoot for.thanks.

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  3. Mark Macklam
    Mark Macklam says:

    Tangential to your discussion but I think important to point out, the length of time French students enjoy to have their lunch, if viewers were wondering, results in a longer school day. In Pezanas where we stay most Summers, school ends at 5:00 pm.

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  4. Michelle Fulmore
    Michelle Fulmore says:

    when i was in middle school i just chose to buy the fruit and salad for lunch (in the US) but we were in a more well off neighborhood so the school was better funded for literally everything. When i got to high school, we had way more options but the schools partnered with several fast food places to serve some of their foods in the cafeterias. I basically started just bringing my own food bc i didn't like eating such heavy foods during the day. if we didn't have those options, i probably would have just skipped lunch bc the school cooked foods were not appetizing at all.

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  5. katy castanos
    katy castanos says:

    When my daughters were children I went on a food revolution and got rid of the junk food in my pantry and started feeding them healthy, organic food❣️I also think the people in California are generally more health conscious ❣️🥰💕🥕🥑🍓🍞🥬

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  6. none
    none says:

    its the same in latin america!! we eat in family, at the same table, and everyone has the same meal. kids will usually have ''kid's food'' as a mid-afternoon snack, that would be cookies, cake, fruit, juice or chocolate milk but breakfast, and specially lunch, also dinner, will be like that! homemade cooked healthy/balanced food. at least in brazil

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  7. Jessica Reid
    Jessica Reid says:

    One and a half to two hours for lunch!! Incredible, I remember my lunch block in high school being only a half hour, and I feel like it sets us up well for the expectations we'll have in the workplace of short / nonexistent lunch breaks in the US.

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  8. pacha 79
    pacha 79 says:

    I lived 7 years in US and eating healthy there was not affordable for me. Fresh food is too expensive there, that's what people don't understand. The poorer people are in US, the less healthy they eat. It's a whole economic and social scenario that doesn't make healthy eating possible to everyone. There are no supermarkets with fresh food in poorer neighborhoods.

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  9. stargirl3334
    stargirl3334 says:

    I wish I could leave a photo caption of what my high school cafeteria served for lunch (American)😂. The average meal was served on a three section styrofoam tray, with the main being a low quality cheese burger (cheapest beef, cheese, and white bun available), canned mushy and salty carrots, ranch dressing, apples the size of a mandarin orange, a milk jug, and maybe a chocolate pudding cup. I believe that meal was $10. We also served snacks that were variations of deep fried junk, packaged snacks cakes/honeybuns, and frozen orange juice cups.

    I heard a podcaster recently say that being healthy and avoiding toxins in the US requires you to make health your 9-5 job, while in Europe it's something people don't even have to think about. The things I would do to help our country become more collectivist and healthy like you guys.

    Reply

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