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Healthy Lunchbox Makeover

As the sunny days of summer melt into the crisp, cool days of fall, parents and children shift focus from swimsuits and summer camps to the more serious business of entering a new school year — and this means school supplies, bus schedules, and schoo

Though rushing to meet the hectic pace of another school year is inevitable, it’s important for parents and caregivers to make sure their kids are getting the nutrition they need to make it through the activity-packed school day.

“Today, parents are looking for healthy choices for their children’s lunches,” said Doug Degn, executive vice president for food and consumables for Wal-Mart. “The addition of products like fruit cups or baby carrots to the lunchbox are simple ways to make lunchtime healthier.”

Degn offers the following tips for kicking off a wholesome new school year:

Start with the Basics

Peanut butter and jelly, turkey, ham, chicken salad, and tuna salad are healthful sandwich fillings loaded with protein — but sandwich bread is equally important. Some wholesome varieties include:

• IronKids Wheat Bread is soft bread sweetened with honey for taste. One slice has three grams of protein and all the fiber of whole wheat; two slices have the same amount of calcium as a single glass of milk.

• Hero Kids’ Recipe Bread from Mrs. Baird’s is the ideal bread for kids who prefer not to eat wheat because Hero Kids’ Recipe Bread provides more calcium and other nutrients than regular white bread.

• Nature’s Own Honey Wheat Bread is another alternative that is made with natural ingredients and doesn’t contain preservatives.

Add a Side

Selections for wholesome side dishes are growing by the day in our increasingly health-conscious society, making it easier to include healthy lunch box selections. For example:

• Baby peeled carrots can often be purchased in snack pack sizes, some as small as three ounces.

• Fruit is another convenient and healthy option like apples, bananas, and grapes. Raisins or Craisins, a cranberry-raisin combination, are tasty dried fruit alternatives that are easy to purchase in bulk and remain fresh for days.

• If raw fruit and veggies don’t do the trick, fruit cups like Mott’s Applesauce, Del Monte fruit cups, or Dole FruitBowls add a little bit of zing to a school lunch and are also easy to pack. Since these can be purchased in single servings, it's easy to add in something healthy to a school lunch.

• Yogurt cups with vitamin D and calcium, are another healthful option.

That Little Something Extra

Filling up a growing boy or girl can be difficult, but instead of reaching for sugar- or fat-laden foods that can weigh kids down at lunchtime, there are several alternatives that can be added to a school lunch or make great after-school snacks, including:

• String cheese is a fun way for kids to get calcium in their diets.

• Nature Valley Granola Bars or Kellogg’s Nutri-Grain Bars can be eaten as “dessert” or make a healthy breakfast for families on-the-go.

Washing it Down

No matter how badly they want it, it’s always a good idea to avoid packing sugar-packed sodas in a growing child’s lunch. There are many alternatives to soda on the market, many of which will, believe it or not, appeal to kids. And you can place frozen fruit drinks packaged in foil or cartons in the lunch box to keep foods cool until lunchtime.

• V8 Splash has more of the antioxidant vitamins A, C, and E than orange juice and is now available in single-servings and has a light, fresh taste.

• Tropicana Orange Juice is also available in a package of six, and Kool-Aid Jammers, available in ready-to-go pouches, are convenient alternatives to soda.

• Drinking water is a very good habit to learn at an early age, and many water bottle companies make kid-sized bottled water that are ideal for children’s lunches.

Many discount retailers sell a variety of foods and snacks to make convenient, inexpensive, and wholesome school lunches.

— Courtesy of ARA Content