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Wyoming nutrition program fills spring break food bags

The food bags included a baking mix to help families make a nutritious breakfast, snack and main dish.

Steve Miller, Senior Editor

April 5, 2021

3 Min Read
WFP-ARS-UWyo-food-bags.jpg
Cereal was among the food items donated to families recently through a University of Wyoming nutrition program.USDA ARS

Twelve hundred Wyoming children received spring break food bags in Casper recently with enough supplies to last over nine days.

The food bags included a baking mix from the Cent$ible Nutrition Program (CNP) to help families make a nutritious breakfast, snack and main dish.

The Wyoming Food for Thought Program (WFFTP) in Casper, along with assistance from CNP, which is part of University of Wyoming Extension, and Jan Cundy and Keyhole Technologies, LLC, worked to provide the food bags and supplies.

“We started distributing weekend food bags in January of 2013 and have never missed a weekend – summer or school year – since,” said Jamie Purcell, executive director of WFFTP.

“We’ve seen a 50 percent increase in numbers from last year,” said Purcell.

The bags include shelf-stable, kid-friendly foods like cereal, granola bars, instant oatmeal, fruit cups, cracker packs, tuna, peanut butter, soup, canned pasta, mac n cheese, and ramen, in addition to CNP Master Mix, an all-purpose baking mix.

CNP worked with WFFTP seven years ago to provide CNP Master Mix and recipes in 300 food bags. This year, with so many more bags, the two needed donations to help get all the ingredients to make the CNP Master Mix. Cundy offered to help.

Donations sought

Cundy, owner of Keyhole Technologies, LLC, learned about the need for donations through Natrona County CNP educator Cheryl Hackett during an online Wyoming Hunger Initiative taskforce meeting.

“I mentioned the partnership with Wyoming Food for Thought, and that CNP was able to provide 150 cup samples of CNP Master Mix,” said Hackett. “So, I just mentioned that we would be looking for some community donations to help fund the difference of what we would like to provide, which was three cups total for each bag.”

Cundy offered to buy the ingredients for all 3,600 cups of the mix. She was the president of the Boys and Girls Club of Central Wyoming for three years and has seen first-hand the importance of making sure kids have the food they need to thrive.

“We’re a family business,” said Cundy. “We’ve always believed in giving back. We try to give back with causes that have to do with children, so Food for Thought is very important. We just believe those kids are our future.”

CNP provided three recipes using CNP Master Mix to help students and their families make a breakfast, snack and main dish meal. The CNP cookbook has many recipes that use CNP Master Mix, so Hackett had to narrow down the options to pick those recipes that would be easy to make.

“When we were looking for what recipes we were going to provide, we were looking specifically for the recipes that don’t use a lot of additional ingredients,” said Hackett. “We wanted to increase the likelihood of students and families using the mix to make it into something nourishing that you can eat without many more ingredients.”

Made with whole-wheat flour and dry milk powder, CNP Master Mix has nutrients that are often lacking in store-bought baking mixes.

It is also cost effective.

“The ‘bang for the buck’ was really there with that master mix,” said Cundy.

The food bags were assembled March 24 and went out to students March 25 in time for spring break.

CNP offers nutrition classes and engages in community interventions to help families eat better for less. Classes are free to anyone who income qualifies and available in every county in Wyoming and the Wind River Indian Reservation. CNP is funded by the USDA Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education (SNAP-Ed) and the Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program (EFNEP).

Source: University of Wyoming, which is solely responsible for the information provided and is wholly owned by the source. Informa Business Media and all its subsidiaries are not responsible for any of the content contained in this information asset. 

About the Author(s)

Steve Miller

Senior Editor, University of Wyoming

I was raised on a crop/livestock farm in the Brady/Gothenburg, Nebraska area, and, at the time, resented all the time spent grinding corn, haying in 100-degree weather, castrating pigs and calves, and moving irrigated pipe. I always tried to make myself scarce when time came to butcher chickens. As I grew up, so did the appreciation of my childhood. Now I look back at that time with fondness, although I'm sure my two brothers might disagree with my reflections. My first job in journalism was at my hometown weekly newspaper, learning more about reporting the first three months than the previous four years of college. Mistakenly believing the grass is always greener, or perhaps it was just plain itchy feet, I launched a career of reporting and editing jobs in several states covering city councils, county commissions, county and district courts, education, law enforcement, high school and college sports, and agriculture. I worked at newspapers in Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho, and Montana, and was managing editor at the last two newspapers. I returned to college at the age of 47 and received a 7-12 social sciences teaching certificate. I never put the certificate to use outside of college but have never regretted returning to school because of the life-altering qualities. I better add I have a very patient and supportive wife. I joined the University of Wyoming Extension in 2005 two days after completing my student teaching assignment. I might be the oldest graduate student in the University of Wyoming Department of Communication and Journalism so far halfway toward a master's degree.

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