Activities
| Breakfast Crossword - See how many breakfast foods you know. |
| Breakfast Maze - Cruise through the maze to beat the morning rush and enjoy breakfast at school. | ![]() |
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Breakfast Wordsearch - Find the 12 breakfast words hidden in this puzzle. |
| Fractions Worksheet (Grade 3-5) Make math fun with citrus segment & orange juice fractions. | ![]() |
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Mad Libs Worksheet (Grades 1-2) Fill in the parts of speech and learn something fun & new about delicious Florida Citrus! |
| Matching-Tracing Worksheet (Grades K-1) Sound out your citrus terms and match the breakfast word with its picture. | ![]() |
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Start Your Day with Florida OJ Coloring Sheet (Grades K-5) Bring this family enjoying Florida orange juice to life with color! |
- Fill your classroom with the sweet smell of fresh Florida citrus fruit with this quick and easy recipe for making your own citrus fruit potpourri:
- Add three cups of water to a medium-sized saucepan.
- Grate the peel of a Florida orange, tangerine and/or grapefruit (to your liking) into the water.
- Cut the grated Florida citrus fruit in half and squeeze its juice into the pan. Then add the citrus fruit
to the mix. - Add one to two cinnamon sticks or one teaspoon of cinnamon powder.
- Add a teaspoon of nutmeg (optional).
- Keep over low heat to simmer, stir occasionally and enjoy the aroma of fresh citrus fruit.
- Make "citrus fruit stamps" by cutting Florida oranges, tangerines and grapefruit into halves and dipping the cut end into paint or ink. Stamp paper, poster board or cardboard. Or, make a citrus tree by decorating a bulletin board with brown paper for the trunk and green paper for the leaves. Direct students to dip the fruit into orange or yellow paint and stamp imprints on the "leaves" to complete your tree! Please make sure students wear smocks for this activity.
- Have an "Orange Day" with your class! Invite everyone to wear orange and bring in a variety of different orange foods for everyone to taste (i.e., Florida oranges, Florida tangerines, carrots, bell peppers, orange gelatin, orange juice, yams, squash, etc.). Compare all of the orange foods and explain the nutritional value for each. Next, create a bar graph to show the number of students wearing orange shirts, pants, socks, hats and so on.







