Keyword/Tag: Brighter Bites

Humans of Brighter Bites (July 2017, 2 of 3)

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“At sixteen, I started to work at the Brackenridge hospital. I was able to eat lunch there. That’s when I first started to actually think, you know, broccoli is good. You could put cheese on it or dip it into Ranch dressing. The vegetables were probably there even before I really realized, but that’s when I started to say, I’m going to need to try them all the time. I never tried them because I always felt it wasn’t good if it didn’t come out of a can. I would go through the cafeteria line and I’d see the broccoli and the cauliflower mixed with different things. I remember going home and telling my mom, you know, when I go through the line at the hospital, they have these vegetables. I say, you know what, mom? Maybe that’s something that you could try with us and see if we can get my younger brothers and sisters to start eating that.”

Humans of Brighter Bites is a series that captures how Brighter Bites volunteers, participants, teachers, and supporters connect with food. Check back here for each installment of the current story and each month for a new story.

Humans of Brighter Bites (July 2017, 1 of 3)

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“I come from a family of fourteen. I have eight brothers and six sisters. We were poor, but one thing we always did have was food on the table. My mom was a stay-at-home mom. My dad was in the military but also worked. My mom was the one that was always at home. She would try to give us certain foods to try and eat, but because we were poor we did get services. Back then, they called them “commodities.” Someone came and offered us Spam and things from a can. Back then, gardening wasn’t as big. We did rely on foods that we received, and mainly the ones that I remember were in cans. It wasn’t until maybe fourth or fifth grade that I really start thinking, wow, these carrots and these vegetables come out of the ground. We heard about it, but since we always saw them in cans, we didn’t really think that much about it.”

Humans of Brighter Bites is a series that captures how Brighter Bites volunteers, participants, teachers, and supporters connect with food. Check back here for each installment of the current story and each month for a new story.

Lettuce Celebrate our Dallas Volunteers!

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Come On, Join the Party!

This spring, our teams had the opportunity to celebrate the hard work and heavy lifting of their volunteers. On May 25 the North Texas Food Bank served as party headquarters for Brighter Bites volunteers in Dallas. The celebration honored the amazing group of community members who contributed a total of 7,088 hours towards the bagging and distribution of more than 1.4 million pounds of produce over the academic year! That’s definitely something worth celebrating!

Volunteers were treated to a healthy breakfast buffet featuring egg frittatas and our very own Brighter Bites Apple Cake.

Volunteers were treated to a healthy breakfast buffet featuring egg frittatas and our very own Brighter Bites Apple Cake.

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Representatives from each school show off their fruit and vegetable awards, which celebrate each unique team of volunteers.

Representatives from each school show off their fruit and vegetable awards, which celebrate each unique team of volunteers.

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Volunteers and staff alike couldn't get enough of the dress up options at the photo booth.

Volunteers and staff alike couldn’t get enough of the dress up options at the photo booth.

 


A Taste of Brighter Bites
What does a Brighter Bites celebratory breakfast taste like?

Try our Apple Cake for yourself!

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INGREDIENTS 1½ large red apples, thinly sliced
1 tsp + 1 tsp cinnamon
1 cup + 1 cup unsweetened applesauce
1½ cups whole wheat flour
1½ tsp baking powder
½ tsp baking soda
½ tsp salt
¼ tsp ground ginger
¼ tsp ground nutmeg
¼ tsp ground cloves
1 very ripe banana, mashed
1 egg
½ cup sugar
1 tsp vanilla extractDIRECTIONSPreheat oven to 350°F and spray a 9×13 baking pan with cooking spray. In a large mixing bowl, combine the sliced apples, cinnamon, and 1 cup of applesauce until the apple slices are evenly coated. Then, layer the apple slices on the bottom of the pan.Next, in a mixing bowl combine the dry ingredients: flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and spices. In a separate bowl, combine the wet ingredients (egg, banana, sugar, vanilla, and the remaining cup of applesauce) and mix with a spoon or an electric mixer until well incorporated. Slowly add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients and mix until everything is well incorporated.Pour the cake batter over the sliced apples and spread evenly. Bake in the oven for 35 minutes and remove when done. Allow the cake to cool, then flip over onto a large platter. Slice into 24 pieces and enjoy!

Humans of Brighter Bites (May 2017, 3 of 3)

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“My mom is a naturalist, so she does not believe in chemical medicine. She hates it. She has a doctor that’s a naturalist as well and he tell us and guides us of what is better for our body to take as far as herbs and spices. Cucumber, celery, cilantro, garlic, and lemon: that is more on the sour end, but it helps a lot with cleaning your system, your kidneys. We’ve seen that turmeric in the last year has been so popular, but my mom’s been using it for years. Those noni plants? We’ve been drinking it for years. I don’t know how you say it here, but the “guanabanana” helps a lot with preventing cancer and it helps with cleaning your system, too. She’s been using that for years. It’s really expensive to get the fruits here, but sometimes my uncles sends her the fruits so that she can juice them. When we get an avocado from Puerto Rico, and we have friends over, they’re like, ‘What is that there?!’ And I’m like, ‘That’s what an avocado really is!’ Because it’s like ten times bigger than the little Hass avocados.”

Humans of Brighter Bites is a series that captures how Brighter Bites volunteers, participants, teachers, and supporters connect with food. Check back here for each installment of the current story and each month for a new story.

Humans of Brighter Bites (May 2017, 2 of 3)

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“My first experience of cooking is with the elders in my family, my grandma and my grandpa. They would prepare the breakfast, the lunch, the dinner. I could always remember, it was oatmeal and coffee for breakfast, so we always had a good breakfast. I always had the best chicken soup because my grandmother made everything from scratch. The vegetables came from her garden, the chicken came from her coop. That’s probably what I miss most about my grandparents – they taught us cooking and eating. My mom learned all the traditions from her mom, and she taught them to us, so I implement them at home. We use a lot of garlic, a lot of olive oil, a lot of onions. In the Puerto Rican culture, we use a lot of cilantro – it’s “culantro.” A lot of natural herbs, which give the food flavor and it takes away from using the salt and the pepper and the products that you have to shake onto food to make it taste good. We don’t use those, which is awesome.”

Humans of Brighter Bites is a series that captures how Brighter Bites volunteers, participants, teachers, and supporters connect with food. Check back here for each installment of the current story and each month for a new story.

KERA and Texas Standard Feature Brighter Bites in Dallas

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Courtney Collins, a reporter from KERA FM (NPR for North Texas), traveled to John Q. Adams Elementary School in Dallas to report on Brighter Bites. While she was there, Collins had a chance to speak with Dallas Program Director Alicia Farhat and two of the school’s volunteer parents about the program. The piece not only aired locally on KERA, but was also picked up by Texas Standard, a regional NPR program carried on more than 25 stations across the state. Read and listen to the colorful story here.

 

(Brighter Bites volunteers working with produce provided by North Texas Food Bank and Dallas FreshPoint. Photo courtesy of Courtney Collins/KERA News)

More Brighter Bites Research Published!

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Food co-op models have gained popularity as a mechanism for offering affordable, quality produce. The Journal of School Health, the academic journal of the American School Health Association, has published a scientific paper that uses a qualitative approach to study and demonstrate the impact of Brighter Bites. The paper describes the challenges, successes, and lessons learned from implementation of a school-based program using a food co-op model combined with nutrition education to improve access to and intake of fresh fruits and vegetables among low-income children and their families.

The authors of the paper include Brighter Bites Co-Founder Shreela Sharma, PhD, RD and Brighter Bites Senior Program Director Mike Pomeroy, among others.

Read the paper here!

 

 

 

 

Sharma Family Establishes Game-changing Endowment in Community Nutrition and Health

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Brighter Bites is thrilled to announce that our co-founder Shreela Sharma and her husband have set up an endowment that will strengthen the link between the Michael & Susan Dell Center for Healthy Living and Brighter Bites, and, most importantly, establish a pipeline of brain power that will develop the next generation of Brighter Bites scientists!

This story from the UTHealth website describes the endowment and the new Sharma Fellows who will benefit it. We have also pasted the story below:

Paying it forward is something that many people aspire to every day. Faculty member and alumna, Shreela Sharma, Ph.D., R.D., L.D., along with her husband, Vibhu Sharma, have committed $100,000 to establish the Shreela and Vibhu Sharma Endowed Fund for Excellence in Community Nutrition, Health & Wellness at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) School of Public Health. The donation will be matched one-to-one by the Game Changers Fund offered by UTHealth.

Shreela Sharma is an associate professor in the UTHealth School of Public Health Department of Epidemiology, Human Genetics and Environmental Sciences and works with the school’s Michael & Susan Dell Center for Healthy Living.

“We are grateful to have the support of the Sharmas through this new fellowship,” says Eric Boerwinkle, Ph.D., dean of the School of Public Health. “This support of student academics and research demonstrates the outstanding dedication our faculty members have to the school. Dr. Sharma is already a super star on our faculty, and I look forward to great things from her in the future. Shreela and Vibhu’s gift is a testament to the generosity of the people of Houston to UTHealth and the School of Public Health, in particular.”

The endowment will fund several doctoral-level student fellowships every year. The doctoral fellowships funded by the endowment will be competitive and require a research commitment of at least two semesters (200 hours per semester) from doctoral students selected to be “Sharma Fellows.”

“I went to UTHealth and I had some fantastic experiences and mentors that really made public health important and relevant for me – the whole experience,” says Shreela Sharma about her time as a student at UTHealth School of Public Health where she earned a Ph.D. in 2005. “We always knew that we wanted to give back in any small way possible.”

Sharma, who is known for her work in community nutrition and childhood obesity prevention, says she hopes the fellowship will help the school continue to attract talent at a high level. “We have some fantastic work and research that we’re doing through Brighter Bites, for example. These opportunities would really help students get that ‘public-health-in-action’ experience.”

Shreela Sharma is co-founder of Brighter Bites, alongside Lisa Helfman. This non-profit organization aims to improve eating behavior among predominantly low-income families by introducing them to a routine distribution of fresh produce, along with corresponding education in school and at home, ultimately helping to curb the childhood obesity epidemic in Houston. “Sharma Fellows will be a tremendous asset to the research questions that Brighter Bites is interested in answering” says Lisa Helfman. Sharma’s work at the School of Public Health focuses on Brighter Bites and other community-based nutrition research.

Vibhu Sharma emphasized the economic value that the endowment offers fellows in addition to the experience. Sharma Fellows would not only get compensation for being selected as a fellow, but would also get access to in-state tuition rates. He said he is also interested in the legacy it will leave for his own family. “This would be something in-perpetuity, so it would allow us to have a legacy for the Sharma name,” he says.

He is also excited about continuing to raise awareness in nutrition and public health through this Endowment. “The idea is to highlight what the endowment is going to support, which is research in nutrition and health through programs like Brighter Bites. The outreach and awareness that we would generate from this would hopefully get more people on the healthy bandwagon.” He adds in with a bit of humor, “For people like me, for whom it is easy to jump into a box of Cheetos.”

The endowed fund’s principal investigator is Deanna Hoelscher, Ph.D., R.D., director of the Michael & Susan Dell Center for Healthy Living on the School of Public Health’s campus in Austin (one of six campuses across the State of Texas). Hoelscher’s role in the endowment will be to make sure funds are dispersed as soon as they are ready; see that student work is supervised by a faculty member; and promote the fellowship whenever possible.

Hoelscher echoes the Sharmas’ sentiments for attracting top students to the School of Public Health. “Whenever you get funding like this – especially when it’s for a student who is out of state or out of country – that in-state tuition really amplifies the amount of money you get through the fellowship itself.”

This endowment will strengthen the relationship between academia and the non-profit sector. The goal is to improve the nutrition status and health of parents, children and the greater community.

Houston Business Journal: Produce-providing nonprofit on track to expand nationally

The following article was printed in today’s Houston Business Journal “Back Page” column. Since the content is password-protected, we are printing it in full here:

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Lisa Helfman’s 5-year-old son declined a piece of cake at a birthday party and asked if there was any fruit instead. Helfman’s family had recently joined a weekly fresh food co-op, and her two sons’ food habits had completely changed. Something just clicked for her.

“I sat down and thought that if I could have this luck in changing my children’s eating habits in my house, could I do the same thing for children in the inner city and underserved communities where there are food deserts?” Helfman said.

She was soon creating and pitching her ideas of what would become Brighter Bites — a program that provides fresh produce to families through their children’s schools. The program works with partners like the University of Texas School of Public Health, the Houston Food Bank and KIPP Schools to supply fresh foods and education to teach sustainable eating habits to low-income families.

“Parents always want to do the right thing, they just don’t always have the tools to do it,” Helfman said. “We empower them to give them a better life.”

Now, more than four years later, Brighter Bites has delivered over 11 million pounds of produce, employs a staff of 42 people, has served over 20,000 families across Houston, Austin and Dallas, and, most importantly to Helfman, 74 percent of the families served say they maintain the healthy eating habits after the program is over.

As big of an undertaking as Brighter Bites is, running a nonprofit is not Helfman’s only gig. She is also director of real estate at H-E-B. Her two positions complement each other in that Helfman, through her work with Brighter Bites, knows where there are food needs, which translates to where H-E-B needs to be.

Helfman, who was one of HBJ’s Women Who Mean Business honorees in 2016, sat down with HBJ to talk expansion and growth of Brighter Bites and H-E-B.

How does Brighter Bites work exactly? We go into schools, and the Houston Food Bank delivers the food to the school. A team made up of my staff and parent volunteers bag produce for parents to take home when they pick up their kids. Every family gets 50 servings of fresh produce with eight to 12 different items per week for eight weeks in the fall, spring and summer. The students are then taught nutrition education in the classroom, and parents are given nutrition handbooks, tip sheets and recipes. Also, when the parents pick up their children and their produce, they participate in a fun food experience where they have a recipe sample that correlates to a difficult item in the bag, like a kale smoothie or a pear pomegranate salad. We’re teaching them how to use the produce in the bag.

You’ve been up and running since fall of 2012. What has been the most rewarding part of Brighter Bites over the years? It’s really amazing to me to have watched an idea grow from just my own boys to affecting thousands of families across Texas to change the way people view. I was this mom that had an idea, and I surrounded myself with all these experts who were passionate about the program like me. I was at Texas Children’s in real estate at the time, and I have my partners at the Houston Food Bank and the University of Texas School of Public Health plus amazing relationships with H-E-B and Sysco now. I’ve been able to watch my dream come true.

Started in Houston, Brighter Bites has expanded to Austin and Dallas. What were the challenges of entering into the new markets? We launched Austin in summer 2015, and Dallas launched in the summer of 2014. I’m from Houston, so I know the community really well, and I was able to get partners and staff really quickly. In Dallas and Austin, we had to find a good team, which we did, but we were in a market we didn’t know. We had to develop new relationships with the food banks and schools there. The thing about Brighter Bites is we aren’t reinventing the wheel; we’re just bringing people together to deliver this product.

Where are you looking to expand next? We are in talks with two cities outside Texas, and hope to launch those in fall 2017. We still have plenty of growth to do in Texas too. We currently have a waiting list of schools, so we also want to expand our service within the cities we are in right now. So, we have a plan to expand to the two cities we are in talks with, and then roll out an expansion plan for the cities we are currently in.

How did you find your way into H-E-B? I met Scott McClelland of H-E-B through the Houston Food Bank, and I pitched him Brighter Bites. I told him I wanted to create so much demand for fresh produce in underserved communities where H-E-B wants to build stores. I wanted to create sustainability and see the families participating in the program have access to purchase fresh produce on their own. H-E-B then came on as a partner and provided the bags for produce pickup.

One day, McClelland offered me a job. I didn’t know anything about the grocery business, but I did know real estate and, because of Brighter Bites, I knew where the needs were.

H-E-B is constantly expanding. How’s business? We’re doing great. We’re now the market share leader in Houston, and that’s exciting. We want to continue building iconic projects to continue that growth, like our partnership with Midway on a mixed-use project at Washington Avenue and Heights Boulevard. We also have two-story stores in Bellaire and the Heights, which is a new concept for us. We are trying to be more progressive inside the Loop, where real estate is expensive. So, I think you’ll be seeing more of these two-story concepts. We really try to tailor the stores to the community. We’re also in major growth mode for our other concept, called Joe V’s, which is a smaller concept that is priced 15 to 20 percent lower than other grocery stores. We’re building our eighth location right now.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.


By the Numbers

18,000— Number of families Brighter Bites currently serves

74%— Percentage of families that continued fresh food eating habits after the program

11.3 million— Pounds of food provided


Closer Look: Lisa Helfman

Founder and board chair of Brighter Bites; director of real estate at H-E-B

Education: J.D. from the University of Houston; Bachelor’s from Tulane University

Age: 41

Family: Sons Drew, 11, and Nathan, 8

Hometown: Houston

Neck of the woods: West University

Favorite fresh snack: Apples with chi spice almond butter.

Advice for founding a nonprofit: “Believe in your idea and understand that anything is possible.”

Natalie Harms works on the Houston Business Journal’s weekly edition, manages content for the special editions — including HBJ’s awards programs — and runs the social media accounts. Follow her on Twitter for more.