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SNAP Challenge Day 2: Deja vu all over again

By COLLEEN ALMEIDA SMITH Staff Writer on Sep 8, 2013, at 4:42 PM  Updated on 9/08 at 4:44 PM



BECAUSE I SAID SO

Offer your child support without judgment

Every once in a while I read parenting advice so profound that it taps my mother-lode of emotion and makes me cry.

The ...

SNAP Challenge Day 1: Is that all there is?

I started the SNAP Challenge today after a run to the grocery store last night. I was going to say 'quick run' but it took ...

Taking the SNAP Challenge

Can you meet your food needs on $4 a day?

Normally I wouldn't have to find out whether I could, but this year as part ...

CONTACT THE BLOGGER

Colleen Almeida Smith

918-581-8481
Email

2013/9/collage.jpg

My breakfast, lunch and dinner were the same for two days last week on the SNAP Challenge.


My two-day SNAP Challenge is over, and I survived. I didn't actually thrive, though, which I think is the point.

By 3 p.m. the second day, I was tired and cranky and needed a pick-me-up to get over my late afternoon slump. The caffeine withdrawal headache wasn't helping either. But having spent my entire $8 for two days of groceries, I couldn't even afford a can of soda to get me through.

I ate the same food for breakfast, lunch and dinner both days. Here's a recap:

Breakfast: A package of raisin, date and walnut instant oatmeal. (The second day I had two packages.)

Lunch: Half of banana and almond butter on toasted wheat bread.

Dinner: Yellow rice topped with a combination of canned tomatoes and green chilies, a can of black beans and a can of corn, with cumin, ground oregano and red pepper added from my spice cabinet.

I drank water with each meal, and successfully resisted the homemade cookies and fresh produce in the office.

As the new president of the board of the Community Food Bank of Eastern Oklahoma, I was asked to participate in the SNAP Challenge for Hunger Action Month. Food banks across the United States use September to raise awareness of hunger and food insecurity in our communities.

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which used to be known as food stamps, helps provide food for more than 600,000 Oklahomans each month. Many of the recipients are children with working adults in their household.

In my two days on the challenge, I ate from what I bought with that $8 -- $4 a day is the average SNAP benefit in Oklahoma. It doesn't allow for the purchase of much food, so I stocked up on wheat bread, oatmeal, and rice and beans because I thought they would be filling. My cart was sadly lacking in fruit and vegetables. See my entire shopping list here.

As I bought the food, I tried to keep nutrition in mind. I didn't want to purchase a lot of processed food that was high in fat and calories. But the sad fact is much of the food people buy with SNAP benefits are cheap calories with little nutritional value -- white bread, snack foods and sugar-laden drinks. That's why the obesity rate and the poverty rate are so closely tied together in the United States.

For an excellent look at the unequal cost of calories, I recommend this blog on the Economics of Obesity.

According to the Food Research and Action Center, Oklahoma is ranked 10th in difficulty accessing affordable fresh fruits and vegetables. In trying to combat this trend, the food bank has made a special effort to secure more produce for its partner programs, and some of the area farmers markets not only accept food stamps, but double them -- allowing families to purchase $20 in fruits and vegetables for $10 in SNAP benefits.

Eating healthy is hard on limited means and requires a lot of planning. Websites such as the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Recipe Finder and Cook for Good offer excellent resources for making nutritional food on a budget.

After two days on the challenge I was thrilled to be able to eat the fruits, vegetables and dairy products that are normally part of my diet. But I can afford them. Not everyone can say that.


Follow Colleen Almeida Smith on Twitter.


SCENE: Visit the home to all things food, movies, TV, music and local entertainment.
BECAUSE I SAID SO

Offer your child support without judgment

Every once in a while I read parenting advice so profound that it taps my mother-lode of emotion and makes me cry.

The ...

SNAP Challenge Day 1: Is that all there is?

I started the SNAP Challenge today after a run to the grocery store last night. I was going to say 'quick run' but it took ...

Taking the SNAP Challenge

Can you meet your food needs on $4 a day?

Normally I wouldn't have to find out whether I could, but this year as part ...

CONTACT THE BLOGGER

Colleen Almeida Smith

918-581-8481
Email

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SCENE FEED

Gunman in Navy Yard rampage was hearing voices He had been treated since August by Veterans Affairs, the officials said.

17 hours ago

191 Comments

Putin and Obama

2 days ago

166 Comments

Obama's Jail

6 days ago

116 Comments

United We Stand

last week

88 Comments

Obama Foreign Policy

4 days ago