Gallery: Callouts 30 Under 30 2023
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Students have a reputation for eating nothing but pasta and baked beans on toast (which, in fact, is pretty good for us) – but there’s much more to students’ diets.
One survey found that one in 10 students in the UK are vegetarians, which is twice as many as the general population. Diets with low or no meat have been associated with health benefits, although the overall healthfulness of a vegetarian diet depends on what foods are eaten instead of meat. The same survey also found that a quarter of students eat convenience foods most, or every, day.
Another study concluded that only one in five students had “favorable eating behaviors”, which included moderate snacking, consuming little fast food and eating a lot of fruit and vegetables.
Researchers have also found that students are more likely to gain more weight than people of their age who don’t go to university.
Despite a brief deviation from the norm during Covid when students didn’t move out of their family homes, “the research shows that generally students don’t eat very healthily”, says Martin Caraher, professor emeritus of food and health policy at City, University of London.
On a more positive note, students are drinking less alcohol than they did 10 years ago, says John Holmes, professor of alcohol policy at the University of Sheffield in the UK. This is particularly good news because evidence suggests that we establish our drinking habits during young adulthood and maintain them, and that the risks for certain diseases, including liver disease, heart disease and some types of cancer (including breast, bowel and throat), increase based on the amount we drink over our lifetime, Holmes says.
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Students’ drinking habits can also affect their diets; they’re more likely to eat after drinking alcohol, and more likely to eat calorific foods high in salt and sugar, according to research. This behavior is perpetuated by the false belief that you have to eat something alongside drinking alcohol to help “soak up the alcohol”, says Jessica Kruger, clinical assistant professor of community health and health behavior at the University at Buffalo in New York.
“If someone’s out drinking, they’re not going to search for healthy options,” she says. “Nor do many bars or restaurants that are open late have many healthy options, especially in student areas.”
Kruger surveyed more than 250 students and found that they don’t tend to make healthy choices regarding food the day after drinking, either. While there’s no data, Kruger speculates that it may be because alcohol can dehydrate you, and in response, the body craves salty foods in order to get you to drink more water.
EXCLUSIVES: Ivanka Trump spent Giving Tuesday in North Carolina with Ripe Revival, an organization that works to distribute meat, dairy, fresh produce and other items to food-insecure rural families in the state.
“Wonderful organizations like Ripe Revival foster connectivity between America’s small farms and hungry families in need of healthy and nutritious food,” Trump said. “On this Giving Tuesday, I had the pleasure of joining Ripe Revival in North Carolina to help distribute their beautiful, locally sourced fresh produce, protein and dairy to food-insecure rural families near Raleigh.”
During her visit, Trump helped Ripe for Revival pack its mobile market bus with food and later volunteered at one of their weekly distribution sites in Littleton, NC The organization has partnered with the Ed Fitts Charitable Foundation and Littleton Academy, a community organization and a school , to establish a voucher program that lets parents shop for groceries with their children after school.
IVANKA TRUMP SAYS SHE LOVES HER FATHER BUT DOES ‘NOT PLAN TO BE INVOLVED IN POLITICS’
Prices for the food products in the mobile market bus are subsidized and cost about 25% less than the prices found in the grocery store.
“Ripe For Revival’s purpose is to revive communities through food by creating an impact from the farm to the consumer and beyond,” CEO Will Kornegay told Fox News. “Our mission is rooted in agriculture and driven by connecting communities together.”

Ivanka Trump spent Giving Tuesday in North Carolina.
(Trump)
“We are honored to spend Giving Tuesday with Ivanka Trump and her team as they visit the Ripe For Revival 501(c)(3) pay-what-you-can Mobile Market program,” Kornegay said. “This non-profit program makes fresh, local produce and food accessible and affordable to all, regardless of their budget.”
Ripe Revival credits the creation of their business and nonprofit organization to the Farmers to Families Food Box program that Trump spearheaded alongside USDA’s Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue during the Trump administration. That program provided nearly 4 billion meals to families in need during the COVID pandemic.
The former program participants, including Ripe for Revival, have grown both their for-profit food distribution business and their non-profit organization.
Since she left the government, Trump has focused on philanthropic efforts that include supporting farmers in the United Statesfighting food insecurity and aiding in various disaster relief efforts at home and abroad.
IVANKA TRUMP SPOTTED ENJOYING THE LAST FEW DAYS OF SUMMER IN MIAMI
During the early days of Russia’s war against Ukraine, she helped supply 1 million meals to Ukrainian families in need.
Domestically, she has provided financial relief and volunteered in disaster-stricken areas across the United States, including Kentucky, Florida and Louisiana.
In an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital this month, Trump said he does “not plan to be involved in politics” again.

Ripe Revival helps food insecure rural communities.
(Ripe Revival)
“I love my father very much. This time around, I am choosing to prioritize my young children and the private life we are creating as a family,” Ivanka Trump told Fox News Digital. “I do not plan to be involved in politics.”
“While I will always love and support my father, going forward I will do so outside the political arena. I am grateful to have had the honor of serving the American people and will always be proud of many of our administration’s accomplishments.”
She told Fox she was “extremely close” to her father.
“That hasn’t changed and will never change,” she added. “I’ve had many roles over the years but that of daughter is one of the most elemental and consequential. I am loving this time with my kids, loving life in Miami and the freedom and privacy with having returned to the private sector. This has been one of the greatest times of my life.”
IVANKA TRUMP SEND 1M MEALS TO UKRAINIAN REFUGEES
Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, moved to Miami after spending four years in WashingtonDC, and serving in the Trump administration.
“My kids are thriving, and I want to maintain this cadence — this rhythm — at this point in our family’s life,” she said, adding that “time is fleeting, and every parent will tell you it really does go by so quickly. “
The couple has three children — Arabella, 11, Joseph, 9, and Theodore, 6.
“They are at critical ages, and we are enjoying these moments with them,” Trump said. “We’re happy where we are right now, and we will continue to support my father as his kids.”
Trump, who served as a senior adviser in the White House during his father’s administration, told Fox News Digital that she “never intended to go into politics.”

Ivanka Trump volunteered with Ripe Revival.
“I’m very proud of what I was able to accomplish,” she said. “I left it all on the
Qhe only has access to Nigerian food that Oluwakolapo Smith had in North Texas was a store 40 minutes away—a problem he says was felt by fellow Nigerian immigrants in the US
Photo by Tim Tadder for FORbes
So in 2018, he dropped out of college to find direct-to-consumer Nigerian food and beverage box AllIDoIsCook, along with business partners Bethany Oyefeso. Today, they’ve shipped over 10,000 boxes of their meat pies and stews to more than 3,000 customers and expect to generate nearly $1 million in revenue this year.
Smith and Oyefeso are among this year’s stand-outs on the 2023 Forbes 30 Under 30 Food & Drink list, which highlights up-and-coming superstars from the worlds of restaurants, farming, packaged food, alcohol and recipe development who have persevered despite the odds. Their game-changing work should be watched.
To compile the 12th annual list, judges and Forbes reporters convened in-person to taste samples and discuss the candidates. Candidates were evaluated by a panel of judges featuring Kardea Brown, host of the Food Network’s Delicious Miss Brown Girl; Under 30 list of alumni Vanessa Pham, cofounder and CEO of Omsom; Randall Lane, Forbes’ chief content officer; and Lee Brian Schrager, founder, South Beach Wine & Food Festival. To be considered for this year’s list, all candidates had to be under the age of 30 as of December 31, 2022, and never before named to a 30 Under 30 list.
Despite the hardships the last year brought to the industry, four restaurants are featured on our 2023 list. That restaurant roster includes two chefs nominated for the 2022 James Beard Emerging Chef award: finalist Williamsburg, Brooklyn-based Bonnie’s chef Calvin Eng28; and semifinalists Shenarrie Freeman, 29, the executive chef of Cadence, a plant-based, Southern soul restaurant in New York’s East Village. In addition, there‘s 29-year-old Téa Ivanovicthe cofounder of Washington, DC-based Immigrant Food, and Jun Chothe 28-year-old behind seafood delivery-focused chain The Boil Daddy.
Cho started the fast-growing restaurant with just $30,000 of his own money in June 2020. The South Korean immigrant started with one restaurant in Downtown Los Angeles, but quickly decided to franchise the business, allowing franchisees to operate a brick and mortar restaurant with a full dining experience or operate in a ghost kitchen to minimize labor costs. Today, there are nine Boil Daddy restaurants throughout California and Texas that Cho projects will bring in $15 million in revenue in 2022, up from $5 million last year. Cho plans to expand to the East Coast, opening 20 locations by year end and 100 by 2023.
Many startups on this year’s list are harnessing emerging technologies to sustainably feed the world’s growing population. Gabriel Nipote27, Henry Michaelson26, and Spencer Price, 26 founded startup Halla to help food retailers predict what a shopper will want before they know they want it. With nearly $10 million in funding from Endless Frontier Labs, Food Retail Ventures and others, Halla has been deployed at over 3,000 ecommerce storefronts, which span multiple top 10 grocers in the US and Canada.
Creators on the 2023 list include Same Dadathe author of cookbook Love To Cook Itand Nicholas Norena, the Instagram sensation with the account @thesucculentbite. These are just a few of the young individuals who are creating companies and movements that will define 2023 and beyond.
This year’s list was edited by Kristin Stoller and Chloe Sorvino, with Anthony Tellez. For a link to our complete 2023 Under 30 Food & Drink list, click hereand for full 30 Under 30 coverage, click here.
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