This blog post was written by Kelly Moltzen, Program Manager at Bronx Health REACH.
Kids deserve access to healthy, affordable food. Unfortunately, junk foods and sugary beverages are heavily marketed to youth, especially in communities of color, making these unhealthy items too convenient for them to purchase. This leads to poor health outcomes, with 55.8% of Bronx youth consuming at least one sugary beverage per day, and making 36.4% of them overweight or obese, according to the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Bronx Health REACH’s Bodega Fresca pilot project is focused on making healthy, affordable food options available in Bronx bodegas, and spreading the word to students and staff at neighborhood schools.
Since Spring 2025, Bronx Health REACH, in partnership with the Bodega and Small Business Group, Collective Fare, and the FRESCH initiative’s Shen’naque Sean Butler, have been testing our healthy grab-and-go items in bodegas in the Hunts Point and Longwood communities of the Bronx. The goal of this pilot project is to build sufficient supply and demand to establish an economically viable delivery route. To determine which healthy products consumers would purchase, we provided taste testings of these products at participating bodegas during afterschool hours, with youth from nearby schools, as well as bodega customers and other community members, and surveyed them for their feedback. We also held taste testings at several schools in June 2025. We have used the feedback to identify which healthy products were most popular and which ones could be improved to better match the community’s tastes.
These healthy offerings included: Mangú-Stuffed Empanaditas, Jerk Chicken Wraps, Watermelon-Cucumber Salad with Tajin-Lime Dressing, Coconut-Guava Energy Bites and Tropical Mint Cooler juice with pineapple, cucumber, lime and mint. Feedback for these products has been positive. As the Bodega Fresca team balances costs of production, distribution, and shelf life, items currently being sold in stores include two types of energy bites and three types of juices: Red Refresh Lemonade, Tropical Mint Cooler, and Coconut Ginger Glow.
This is not the first time that Bronx Health REACH has worked with local schools to promote healthy bodega initiatives. We did so previously during the Don’t Stress, Eat Fresh campaign in 2018-2019, and through the FRESCH initiative in 2020. These projects brought students to their nearby bodegas to request healthy options be sold there. This provided the students with an opportunity to learn about the importance of healthy eating and be empowered to take leadership around food justice advocacy. Also, Bronx Health REACH partner, the Mary Mitchell Family and Youth Center, had their Youth Food Justice Club members survey the local community’s food options to better understand the limitations in accessing healthy food options.
Such initiatives around promoting healthy options for youth naturally fit into the aims of school wellness councils. Many schools that have wellness councils want to focus on nutrition and promoting healthy eating. Some schools have started school gardens and some promote healthy bodega food options to students.
Our experience over the years tells us that kids want more information about what’s in their foods and beverages. In 2019, Bronx Health REACH and the CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy organized a focus group study to better understand youth perspectives on sugary beverages as well as youth opinions about messages intended to dissuade them from drinking these beverages. Findings from that study found that, Bronx youth acknowledged that sugary beverages are not healthy, that corporations can be manipulative, and that more should be done to communicate to youth about the health risks of these products. Those that participated in the focus group said that if healthier options were advertised to them, it could be influential in encouraging them and their peers to choose the healthier options. One participant said, “If you were to make a new type of drink and then put a cool name, and then lower down the sodium, the calories and the sugar and the carbohydrates, I mean it could be the new hit thing that people would want to drink to get healthy.”
Collective Fare, which is producing the grab-and-go products for the Bodega Fresca pilot, has created a Brand Ambassador Toolkit with information about the health benefits and other appealing aspects of the new line of products. This can be an entry point for schools that want to empower their students to be food justice advocates in their local community.
The Bodega Fresca project has shown promising signs for the Bronx community. It is endorsed by Bronx Borough President Vanessa L Gibson and Francisco Marte, President of the Bodega and Small Business Group. Borough President Gibson, in an op-ed on the importance of this initiative for the Bronx Times and AMNY wrote, “I urge all of our residents to join us in bringing healthier options to our bodegas, because Healthy Bodegas make Healthy Communities.”
If your school would like to partner with Bronx Health REACH to schedule a taste testing event or a Brand Ambassador training, please contact Diana Bernal at dibernal@institute.org
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