Organic Flavored Milks Bayonne NJ

Organic flavored milks are one of the newest food trends aimed specifically at parents and children. But nutrition experts have mixed views on the subject. Read on for more detailed information in the following article.

Elizabeth Farmers Market
(908) 965-0660 ext. 13
Between Elizabeth Ave. & High St.; At Union Square Plaza
Elizabeth, NJ
Common Greens Farmers Market
(973) 733-9333 x21
Between Broad & Park Place; Military Park
Newark, NJ
Ambrosial Granola, Inc.
(718) 491-1335
PO Box 090712
Brooklyn, NY
Journal Square Farmers Market
(201) 798-6055
Kennedy Blvd. at Journal Square; Directly off Path Terminal
Jersey City, NJ
The Fuzzybutts
(718) 232-3340
6507 15th Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
Flavorganics, LLC
973-344-8014ext.109
268 Doremus Ave
Newark, NJ
Downtown Harvest, CSA
Jersey City, NJ
Hamilton Park Market
(201) 388-4506
Hamilton Park, 8th St.& Jersey Ave.
Jersey City, NJ
Gillies Coffee Company
(718) 499-7766
150 19th Street
Brooklyn, NY
GoNaturally
(973) 926-2300
35 Hillside Ave
Hillside, NJ
Data Provided by:
  
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Pros & Cons of Organic Flavored Milks

As discussed yesterday, organic flavored milks are one of the newest food trends aimed specifically at parents and children. But nutrition experts have mixed views on the subject.

“Moms can feel good about giving their kids flavored milk, such as chocolate and strawberry,” says Molly Pelzer, a registered dietitian with the National Dairy Council and mother of two. “Kids not only savor the flavor, but it provides them with the nutrients they need to grow healthy and build a solid bone bank.”

“Milk is a critical part of kids’ diets, yet it’s competing against some less healthy, but very flashy, beverages,” adds Grant Prentice, executive vice president of marketing for Dairy Management Inc., an organization that helps build demand for dairy on behalf of its producers—including the much-publicized 3-a-Day campaign .

“Serving milk to kids in colorful plastic bottles and giving them a choice of flavors—whether it’s at school or their favorite restaurants—catches their attention and motivates them to drink more milk, which helps build stronger bones and better bodies,” he adds.

But not everyone is buying into this marketing message.

“I strongly disagree with sugared flavored milk,” says Chef Ann Cooper, former executive chef and director of wellness and nutrition at The Ross School in East Hampton, New York. She’s also the author of In Mother’s Kitchen: Celebrated Women Chefs Share Beloved Family Recipes and Bitter Harvest: A Chef’s Perspective on the Hidden Danger in the Foods We Eat and What You Can Do About It .

“They’re really no better than soda—except for the calcium,” Chef Cooper asserts. “Many have a sugar and calorie content that equals or exceeds that of soda, and they become just another way that we’re teaching our children to drink sweets.”

Chef Cooper believes children and teenagers can meet their calcium needs from other sources and outlines the following daily requirements:

  • Preschool-age children: 500 to 800 mg calcium (2 to 3 servings...

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