The Edible Pyramid: Good Eating Every Day

The Edible Pyramid: Good Eating Every Day

The Edible Pyramid:  Good Eating Every Day by Loreen Leedy
Rating:  3 out of 5 stars

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) introduced the original food pyramid in 1992 to help guide Americans in eating healthy.  The pyramid was revised in 2005, using colored stripes of different sizes to show the types of food and portions of each that we should be eating.  In 2011, First Lady Michelle Obama helped to release MyPlate, which has now replaced the food pyramid.  As a result, even after being revised, this picture book is now out of date.  It can still be used to teach children about healthy eating choices though.  In the book, the restaurant The Edible Pyramid has just opened.  The animal guests receive a pyramid menu to help them choose a meal with guidance from the waiter.  The waiter, goes through each category of the pyramid giving examples of foods that belong to each group.  There really wasn’t much of a story here, with the book being more of a teaching tool about the pyramid.  While the book aims to target younger children with the animal characters and colorful illustrations, I think real photographs and pictures of food would be more informative, especially with the foods that children may not be familiar with (cottage cheese, tuna, granola, etc.)  This book is a decent introduction for younger children to the basic food groups.

*This book was borrowed from the library.

The Burger and the Hot Dog

The Burger and the Hot Dog

The Burger and the Hot Dog by Jim Aylesworth
Illustrated by:  Stephen Gammell
Children’s Picture Poetry book
Rating:  4 out of 5 stars

From goodreads.com:

So what happened after that? Well, you’ll have to look inside this book to find out. Because, you see, there is a whole world out there in which burgers, hot dogs, sticky buns, ice-cream bars, bologna, popcorn, and all sorts of other food folks exist together and do and go through all the daily stuff we all do. But it’s only folks like Jim Aylesworth, together with artist Stephen Gammell, who can bring to us that world in a collection of hilarious rhymes and pictures. After all, what happens when a bunch of sugar cookies give a bagel a hard time, or an ice-cream bar gets stranded on a beach, or a couple of pickles go out dancing?…Well, come on in and see! And when you’re done, try to invent some food folks of your own.  

* This picture book is a collection of food-related poems.  Aylesworth has taken everyday food items and creates short, funny poems.   All of the poems are told in rhyme and are accompanied by colorful, humorous illustrations.  We enjoyed sitting together as a family and taking turns reading the poems.  The books ends with a suggestion to the reader to create new poems using “food folk” from their town.