Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
Well, for something really healthy you could do a fruit salad. Or make a banana nut bread, cranberry bread, zucchini bread, etc... or a carrot cake. Yeah, I would think the teachers would get overloaded with chocolate cake, brownies, chocolate chip cookies.... too much of a good thing!! LOL
We like mini cheesecakes and cream puffs, pies, teachers aren't picky! In fact, we are notorious for scarfing down free food, no matter what it is, ha ha
Breads are good too.....chocolate dipped pretzel rods would be an easy thing to have too.
I was just at a party the other day and someone brought a "fruit pizza". It was delicious.
They used a pie crust, spread some cream cheese over it lightly, and covered with a variety of fresh berries, etc. Very similar to the veggie pizza appetizer using the crescent roll dough, cream cheese and veggies. everyone enjoyed it. Sweet, yet light and pretty healthy.
When I was still teaching, and parents chose to do things like this for us, I was always most appreciative of breakfast items like muffins, or bagels, and the like. Fresh fruit is always great, even if it is a bunch of bananas, or just "apples for the teacher." Nine times out of ten, I found myself running out the door without breakfast, myself.
We also liked having flavored coffees. Most teachers' areas have a coffee maker, or microwave, and we would brew a pot during the morning every day. Sometimes, different coffees were really nice -- like the little one-pot coffees available in the store.
I also used to take relatively healthy popsicles and put them in the freezer, or ice cream sandwiches, and Klondike bars, for afternoon treats for myself. You can't imagine how popular those became with the others on my hallway.
Please be sure to include a little note with the goodies, so the teachers know who to thank personally, or who to contact for a copy of the recipe.
Must be nice to be part of a school district where some "well-intentioned" teacher hasn't yet banned parents from bringing homemade goodies to school...if it wasn't purchased in a store, then it can't be brought to my son's school. This only happened about two years ago - up until then, I would regularly bake cookies, cupcakes, brownies, etc. for the events like gold rush day, halloween, etc. with no complaints.
If the teacher who blew it for us thinks the people working at Vons bakery somehow have highter hygiene standards, she is sorely mistaken - I have seen what goes on behind the scenes.
I was most disheartened when a lot of rules governing foods, and their consumption, in a classroom setting came about.
One of my favorite things to do, was to combine foods with works we read. For example, we tried our hand at chapatties (Indian bread), and my HS SRs would make items and bring tea sets when we read Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, or George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion.
I understand many of the concerns, but some of the rules get downright silly -- like insisting the items be store-bought. I assure you, you could eat off the floor in my kitchen, and I have been in some restaurants and stores that were absolutely filthy.
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.
Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.