CHICAGO Eat more fruits and vegetables. Mom says it. Uncle Sam, too. Yet people still do not get enough and the government just doubled the recommended amount.
Trying to entice shoppers, produce companies are putting freshly sliced fruit into fun packages for kids and packaging carrot and celery sticks to fit in a car cup-holder. Some on the new lines are on display at the Food Marketing Institute show, the supermarket industry's annual convention.
Sunkist's Fun Fruits are sliced oranges, apples or pineapples, or red grapes with no stems, available in half-cup serving packages that have pictures of kids on them. The products will be in supermarkets this year; Sunkist is working on a version for grown-ups.
"The kids love them. They open them up just like they would a package of potato chips, but there's no fat in them, and it's all healthy," said Rick Harris, general manager of Sunkist's value-added division. "Everyone's talking about superfoods. This is like the super-snack food."
Younger children have trouble peeling or eating whole fruit by themselves, said Helen Mont-Ferguson, the nutrition director for Boston's public schools, which is one of the many school districts that have tried Fun Fruits.
It is a monumental task for cafeteria staff to peel and cut enough fruit, she said. "In our central kitchen, it took two days for us to section enough oranges for 18,000 kids," Mont-Ferguson said.
The convenience of having a sliced, washed, ready-to-eat snack is what many adults and kids are looking for in any food. That is why grab-and-go containers soups or other foods have become so popular.
People have not found as much convenience in the produce department.
Consumer research shows that the average person eats 1.8 cups of fruits and vegetables a day, according to the nonprofit Produce for Better Health Foundation. That total is less than half the amount recommended in the government's new food pyramid, which says the average person should consume about 5 cups of fruits and vegetables a day.
Now the question is whether people will try to follow that advice or just give up, said Ellie Krieger, a dietitian and author.
"For many people, they feel like that's an overwhelming amount to consume in a day," Krieger said. "Let's break it down, just up it by 2 a day, take it in incremental steps. People don't realize it doesn't have to be all or nothing."
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