1 / 35

Counting Purchased Combination Foods and Cheeses

Counting Purchased Combination Foods and Cheeses. On the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). ~ Purchased Combination foods ~ What are they?. Breaded Chicken Nuggets, patties, tenders Breaded Popcorn chicken Breaded fish sticks, patties, shapes, nuggets Corn dogs and

jerome
Télécharger la présentation

Counting Purchased Combination Foods and Cheeses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Counting Purchased Combination Foods and Cheeses On the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP)

  2. ~ Purchased Combination foods ~What are they? • Breaded Chicken Nuggets, patties, tenders • Breaded Popcorn chicken • Breaded fish sticks, patties, shapes, nuggets • Corn dogs and mini corn dogs • Pizza (any type) • Canned and frozen ravioli • Frozen soups for any component To name a few… • Potato pancakes • Breakfast bites • Lasagna, quesadillas • Chili and Chili Mac • Chicken pot pies • Cheese sauce • Pizza rolls • Egg rolls

  3. Meat/Meat alternates with Binders and Extenders Must be treated like purchased combination food items... • Alternate protein products (APPs) like soy protein isolate • Various types of flour • Cereals • Modified food starches • Dried milk • Carrageenan • Salisbury Steak • Meatballs • Hamburger • Taco Meat • Riblettes • Some sausages • Vegetable burgers Check the ingredients label first for these types of ingredients Purchased food items such as

  4. ~ Purchased Combination Foods ~ • Combination food items can only be counted on the CACFP when the actual content (i.e. meat/meat alternate, bread, etc.) is known and documented. • Most products cannot be taken apart to weigh and measure the ingredients separately for counting the amount of meat/meat alternate (M/MA), fruit/vegetable (F/V) and bread/grain (G/B).

  5. ~ Purchased Combination Foods ~ Acceptable documentation to count purchased combination foods are: • The actual Child Nutrition (CN) label marked on the product, or • A manufacturer’s product formulation statement signed by an official of the manufacturer

  6. ~ Child Nutrition (CN) Labels ~ • USDA must evaluate a product’s formulation to determine how much it can count toward the meal pattern requirements. Once approved by USDA, the manufacturers can state the meal contribution within a CN label on the packaging of the product. • They clearly identify how much a product can count toward the meal pattern requirements. • They provide a warranty against meal disallowance if the CN labeled product is used according to the manufacturer’s directions.

  7. ~ Child Nutrition (CN) Labels ~ • Proper documentation of a CN-labeled product is an actual label on the purchased product carton

  8. ~ Child Nutrition (CN) Labels ~ A CN label will always contain the following: • The CN logo, which is a distinct border; • The meal pattern contribution statement; • A unique 6-digit product identification number (assigned by USDA/FNS) appearing in the upper right hand corner of the CN logo; • The USDA/FNS authorization statement; • The month and year of final FNS approval

  9. ~ Product Formulation Statements ~ • They are information sheets obtained from the manufacturer with a detailed explanation of what the product actually contains and the amount of each ingredient by weight. • It should contain the original signature of an authorized company representative, not a sales representative’ ssignature.

  10. ~ Product Formulation Statements ~

  11. CN Labels = Healthy? • CN labels do NOT indicate that a product is healthy • Used predominately on processed meat and meat alternate products which are often high in sodium, fat and calories • Healthier options are becoming available • If using CN labeled foods, always read the Nutrition Facts panel to choose healthier options

  12. ~ Child Nutrition (CN) Labels ~ • They are not the nutrition facts labels or ingredients lists X X

  13. How to read and use CN labels…

  14. ~ Fish Stick Example ~ Two 1.00 oz breaded fish sticks provide 1.00 oz meat equivalent and .50 serving of bread alternate Meat equivalent calculation: • 1-2 year olds (1 oz) =2 fish stks sticks • 3-5 year olds (1.5 oz) =3 fish stks sticks • 6-12 year olds (2 oz) =4 fish stks sticks

  15. ~ Precooked Beef Patty Example ~ Each 2.00 oz fully cooked beef patty provides 1.75 oz of meat equivalent Meat equivalent calculation: • 1-2 year olds (1 oz) = ¾ burger (round up to 1) • 3-5 year olds (1.5 oz) = 1 burger • 6-12 year olds (2 oz) = 1&1/4 burger (round up to 1 & ½ )

  16. This 4 oz Corn Dog provides 2.0 oz equivalent meat and 2 servings bread alternate for Child Nutrition Meal Pattern Requirements. Meat equivalent calculation: 1-2 year olds (1 oz) = ½ corn dog 3-5 year olds (1.5 oz) = ¾ corn dog 6-12 year olds (2 oz) = 1 corn dog

  17. Five .88oz breaded fully cooked chicken nuggets (2.43 oz Total) provide 2.00 oz equivalent meat/meat alternate and 1.00 serving bread alternate for Child Nutrition Meal Pattern Requirements. Meat Equivalent Calculation: 1-2 yr olds (1 oz) = 3 nuggets; 3-5 yr olds (1.5 oz) = 4 nuggets; 6-12 yr olds (2 oz) = 5 nuggets

  18. Crediting Cheeses

  19. Creditable Cheeses • Natural Cheese • Pasteurized Process Cheese (100% cheese) 2 oz of the following items provides 1 oz meat/meat alternate: • Cheese Food (contains at least 51% cheese) • Cheese Spread • Cottage Cheese • Ricotta Cheese

  20. The following are examples of creditable cheese items…

  21. Pasteurized Process American Cheese

  22. Cheese Spread 2 oz = 1 oz)

  23. Natural Reduced Fat Cheddar Cheese Sticks

  24. 2 oz = 1 oz

  25. Light Pasteurized Cheese

  26. Requires CN label

  27. Non-Creditable Cheeses • Imitation cheese • Cheese Product (contains <51% cheese) • Velveeta

  28. The following are examples of non-creditable cheese items…

  29. Pasteurized Prepared Cheese Product

  30. Pasteurized Prepared Cheese Product

  31. Imitation Mozzarella Cheese

  32. Pasteurized Prepared Cheese Product

  33. Thank you!

More Related