Miss Betti what is this? How Detroit's school lunch lady got good food on the menu

Lela Nargi

Book - 2025

"Miss Betti knew kids in Detroit's schools were not getting wholesome, nourishing lunches. As the district lunch lady, Miss Betti had the power to make a change. She started small and soon she was filling lunch trays with a rainbow of tasty choices. She also started an urban gardening program"-- Provided by publisher.

Saved in:
1 being processed
Coming Soon
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Detroit cafeteria worker acts on her belief that kids deserve delicious, nutritious food. Determined to replace the beige fare that the 46,000 Detroit students in her charge usually found on their lunch trays with more nourishing food--and canny enough to know that she'd have to persuade them to eat it, too--Betti Wiggins started small. Goodbye, iceberg lettuce. Hello, romaine! Out with soggy white potato french fries, in with baked sweet potato fries! Soon a salad bar was stocked with fresh produce….and a lunchroom protest broke out when one principal tried to limit it to upper graders. Eighty school gardens later, plus expanded breakfast and dinner programs, Wiggins was ready for a bigger challenge. Hello, Houston! Not only are the students surrounding the brown-skinned Wiggins in Uroda's illustrations racially diverse, including one with vitiligo; their expressions also encompass a broad range of emotion, from listlessness to skepticism, dawning interest, and finally big smiles as floating images of fresh fruits and veggies give way to flashing stars and confetti. Nargi closes with a note on her still-active subject's later achievements and a capsule history of U.S. school lunch programs that includes a provocative nod to those sponsored by the Black Panthers. Dishes up a decidedly well-earned tribute.(Informational picture book. 6-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.