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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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For give me if this appears twice. I had to correct an error.
Do schools still have homemade bake sales anymore? When I was in grade school a bake sale meant that each student brought in something homemade to sell. The subject came up in a conversation recently and today it seems a lot of schools only allow store bought products at bake sales. What's up with that? Are people getting so paranoid that they're afraid someone is going to bring in tainted Rice Krispie squares? |
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I think it is more of a fear of e-coli. Plus not all parents have the time
and/or the resources to whip out gourmet baked goods at a moments notice. Much easier to hand each kid a catalog to give to their parents, to pass around at the jobs forcing their coworkers to pay outragious amounts of money for crap they really don't want-all in the name of the greater good. Sandra |
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> Much
>easier to hand each kid a catalog to give to their parents, to pass around at >the jobs forcing their coworkers to pay outragious amounts of money for crap >they really don't want-all... Do what I do and tell them you never carry any money with you at work. For me that's true. Where I work if a co-worker is selling something from a catalog they usually just leave the catalog on a desk and let everyone decide for themselves if they want to purchase anything. If a co-worker actually tries to get me to buy something I tell them that since I don't bring in things to sell at work I expect others to extend the same courtesy to me. You just have to learn to say no. |
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As a teacher for many years, I learned one important truth early on: Never
eat anything that was cooked, baked, assembled, or even spent time in an elementary classroom. After I learned that lesson, the hard way, I stopped vomiting. "Sandy n ne" > wrote in message ... > I think it is more of a fear of e-coli. Plus not all parents have the time > and/or the resources to whip out gourmet baked goods at a moments notice. Much > easier to hand each kid a catalog to give to their parents, to pass around at > the jobs forcing their coworkers to pay outragious amounts of money for crap > they really don't want-all in the name of the greater good. > > Sandra |
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In article >,
ospam (DJS0302) wrote: > For give me if this appears twice. I had to correct an error. > > Do schools still have homemade bake sales anymore? When I was in > grade school a bake sale meant that each student brought in something > homemade to sell. The subject came up in a conversation recently and > today it seems a lot of schools only allow store bought products at > bake sales. What's up with that? Fear of food poisoning and contamination. >Are people getting so paranoid that they're afraid someone is going to >bring in tainted Rice Krispie squares? Yes. My youngest hasn't been in elementary school for nearly 20 years and homemade treats were banned even then. Our school didn't do bake sales, though; just birthday treats. -- -Barb (www.jamlady.eboard.com updated 10-16-03; check the PickleHats tab, too.) |
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![]() "DJS0302" > wrote in message ... > For give me if this appears twice. I had to correct an error. > > Do schools still have homemade bake sales anymore? When I was in grade school > a bake sale meant that each student brought in something homemade to sell. The > subject came up in a conversation recently and today it seems a lot of schools > only allow store bought products at bake sales. What's up with that? Are > people getting so paranoid that they're afraid someone is going to bring in > tainted Rice Krispie squares? Regulations in individual states and jurisdictions will vary however the thought process goes something like this: 1. Only products made in a certified kitchen and stored at proper temperatures can be SOLD. 2. Usually no home kitchens are certified. 3. In the event that someone becomes ill for whatever reason if the product is sold - the organization COULD - have a liability claim. Blame the Legal system and the Insurance companies. (After all a bad cupcake should be worth a few hundred thousand dollars, right?) Dimitri |
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>Also, store bought baked goods have ingredients lists on them. So people
>with allergies have a better chance of avoiding something that'll cause a >reaction. So what's to stop someone from using a used container from a store to transport something homemade? I could easily buy a package of cookies from the bakery department at Kroger, save the container, and use the leftover container to hold cookies I've made. If they're worried about listing ingredients on everything then what about church picnics? We always have a cake wheel at our church picnic and the overwhelming majority of the items consist of homemade goods. |
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On Mon, 03 Nov 2003 15:57:16 GMT, "Dimitri" >
wrote: > >"DJS0302" > wrote >> Do schools still have homemade bake sales anymore? > >Regulations in individual states and jurisdictions will vary however the >thought process goes something like this: > >1. Only products made in a certified kitchen and stored at proper >temperatures can be SOLD. >2. Usually no home kitchens are certified. >3. In the event that someone becomes ill for whatever reason if the >product is sold - the organization COULD - have a liability claim. > >Blame the Legal system and the Insurance companies. (After all a bad >cupcake should be worth a few hundred thousand dollars, right?) This is, indeed, a tricky area. I see bake sales for libraries, churches, and other groups advertised from time to time, as well as pot-luck dinners/picnics and fish frys. The regs on food-for-sale are Byzantine. Ex: for a farmers' mkt in Virginia, you *can* sell baked goods if you have a certificate (simply applied for -- no kitchen inspection) from the health dept., but nothing with dairy or egg *fillings* (not ingredients). You can also sell jam, but not canned veg, with a simple $1 permit. You can sell properly refrigerated or iced fish, but only ungutted -- if the fish experiences the "touch of a knife," that operation must be done in a certified facility. My neighborhood association is now purchasing liability insurance to cover activities like an Easter egg hunt in a public park (no real eggs involved) and picnics with commercail food items supplied. One *hopes* that someone suing over a school bake-sale cookie would be laughed out of court, but it's not impossible. |
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![]() "DJS0302" > wrote in message ... > >Also, store bought baked goods have ingredients lists on them. So people > >with allergies have a better chance of avoiding something that'll cause a > >reaction. > We always have a cake wheel at our > church picnic and the overwhelming majority of the items consist of homemade > goods. What's a cake wheel? |
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In article >,
ospam (DJS0302) wrote: > >Also, store bought baked goods have ingredients lists on them. So > >people with allergies have a better chance of avoiding something > >that'll cause a reaction. > > So what's to stop someone from using a used container from a store to > transport something homemade? I could easily buy a package of > cookies from the bakery department at Kroger, save the container, and > use the leftover container to hold cookies I've made. If they're > worried about listing ingredients on everything then what about > church picnics? We always have a cake wheel at our church picnic and > the overwhelming majority of the items consist of homemade goods. Hey, no one said it makes perfect sense. I'm guessing that schools hope and expect folks to honor the rules. Not saying they do, mind, but that's the fond hope. Wish I could remember what the impetus was lo those many years ago that caused the change in our district re homemade class treats. -- -Barb (www.jamlady.eboard.com updated 10-16-03; check the PickleHats tab, too.) |
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On 03 Nov 2003 18:20:06 GMT, ospam (DJS0302) wrote:
>>Also, store bought baked goods have ingredients lists on them. So people >>with allergies have a better chance of avoiding something that'll cause a >>reaction. > >So what's to stop someone from using a used container from a store to transport >something homemade? I could easily buy a package of cookies from the bakery >department at Kroger, save the container, and use the leftover container to >hold cookies I've made. If they're worried about listing ingredients on >everything then what about church picnics? We always have a cake wheel at our >church picnic and the overwhelming majority of the items consist of homemade >goods. *shrug* If this were the sort of thing that worried me, I just wouldn't buy anything that wasn't clearly "factory sealed". -- Siobhan Perricone "Who would have thought that a bad Austrian artist who's obsessed with the human physical ideal could assemble such a rabid political following?" - www.theonion.com |
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![]() "Frogleg" > wrote in message ... <BIG SNIP> One *hopes* that someone suing over a school bake-sale cookie would be > laughed out of court, but it's not impossible. Right, like the woman who spilled her own drive through McDonalds coffee. Dimitri |
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<< Much easier to hand each kid a catalog to give to their parents, to pass
around at the jobs forcing their coworkers to pay outragious amounts of money for crap they really don't want-all in the name of the greater good >> ____Reply Separator_____ And this practice ain't gonna fly in our school district. When I purchased my home, my monthly mortgage payment was $139. This included principle, interest,county, municipal, and school district taxes. 33 years later my home has been paid off for a while. Yet I still pay $217 a month for school taxes. There's no way in hell they should have to sale wrapping paper to fund something!!!! |
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TOM KAN PA wrote:
> And this practice ain't gonna fly in our school district. When I purchased my > home, my monthly mortgage payment was $139. This included principle, > interest,county, municipal, and school district taxes. 33 years later my home > has been paid off for a while. Yet I still pay $217 a month for school taxes. You're getting off easy compared to around here. Over $5G a year here, and I don't live in some mansion. It's a big issue, when people retire, they have to move. I wish they would do something about it already. nancy |
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In article >,
c (TOM KAN PA) wrote: > And this practice ain't gonna fly in our school district. When I purchased my > home, my monthly mortgage payment was $139. This included principle, > interest,county, municipal, and school district taxes. 33 years later my home > has been paid off for a while. Yet I still pay $217 a month for school taxes. > There's no way in hell they should have to sale wrapping paper to fund > something!!!! Is that really school taxes or just your total property tax bill? Where do you live? -- Dan Abel Sonoma State University AIS |
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