RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Rural schools in Amazonas, Brazil, often offer ultra-processed foods in school meals for students, which can lead to health problems and loss of regional food culture. We show an analysis of the menu offered in a riverside school in the Brazilian Amazon and the acceptability of students regarding the consumption of the food they are served with. METHODS: Data were collected in situ, in a riverside school in southern Amazonas, through the analysis of the school menu and the application of an investigative questionnaire to 37 students in the 9th grade of Junior High School. FINDINGS: The research revealed that the foods most consumed by students in school meals are canned beef, canned meatballs, canned sardines, sausage, biscuits, juice, rice porridge, corn porridge, pasta, meat soup, and rice with beans. In the questionnaire that was applied to students, there is a wide variation in the acceptability of the foods offered. However, 57% of students reported not liking the lunch offered at the educational institution. INTERPRETATION: To tackle this problem, it is essential that, local food culture and biodiversity food can be more valued, elements that are often excluded from school menus. This work showed that is also essential to fully adhere to the National School Meal Program (PNAE) in Brazil, which recommends that at least 30% of food intended for school meals must come from family farming, highlighting that quality food is crucial for cognitive development of students. Therefore, the meals offered in the chosen riverside school not only do not meet the PNAE guidelines but are also not well accepted by students. This study shows a significant need to consider the direct relationship between planetary health, school meals food security, and food sovereignty, given the various negative effects of foods that are rich in fat, sodium, preservatives, and other substances. Furthermore, it is imperative to integrate food into the students' context, valuing regional products from the Amazon region. FUNDING: FAPEAM (Amazonas State Research Foundation).