org shows their photo and describes the man as an award-winning scientist and his wife as an artist who once led a cooking school in Tuscany. The couple wants to remain anonymous, but the website sagegardenproject. “It’s a lot more effective for the kids to be here and try something with all the other kids going, ‘Come on, take a bite.’ Peer pressure works in our favor.” Mayeda was at the school Wednesday morning to present a cooking cart from the Sage Garden Project, a nonprofit formed two years ago by a North County couple whose daughter, Sage, once attended Skyline School. “At home, they can get away once in a while with telling mom they don’t like something,” said Dawn Mayeda, program director for the Sage Garden Project. While the assignment was part of teacher Judy Tillyard’s lesson about pancakes from around the world, students also were learning, whether they knew it or not, about vegetables. Students at Skyline Elementary in Solana Beach might be a little young for culinary school, but on Wednesday morning they had no problem slicing carrots, peeling parsnips and mixing eggs to make a stack of latkes. Originally published Decemat 12:01 a.m., updated Decemat 1:55 p.m. Sage Garden Project funds ways to promote healthy diets in schools
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