Basically this. Mushy or not, broccoli and sweet potato are nutritious. You’re coming home to a scratch made dinner. You really need to take a few breaths and be grateful for all that. Read through your post and see how much you are critiquing his foods before you get to the complaint that he critiques your stuff. If you really want your family to enjoy your foods, you’re going to have to find a way to do it yourself. Over the weekends, make what you want and pack it for work lunches. Have the kids cook with you and offer them bites. But leave your dh’s weeknight dinners alone. |
| If you want something different you'll have to do it yourself. |
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Why can't you cook "normal" stuff that winter trigger "eww" from hom and the kids (I'm guessing you're cooking things that aren't visually appealing)?
Ground beef in crock pot before you leave work in the AM. Fixings for tacos in the refrig. Done. Win-win. |
| Doesn’t he want your kids to have a more expansive palate than he does? Or is he just being lazy and wanting to stick with cooking things he knows and can do easily? Have you asked him about this when you can talk seriously? What if he picks the menu four days and you pick it three days. Does he also work an outside job? I hate cooking and would find doing it every night tedious, so it’s nice that you are offering to cook ahead of time for some nights. You guys need to discuss this and compromise. He sounds immature if he’s saying “ew” to foods and trying to turn your kids against certain things. |
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You cook on Sat and Sun (when we are more apt to eat out or get takeout, so if you’re like that, you have to reverse). You get takeout 2 weekdays. He cooks 3 weekdays. Everyone is appreciative in front of the kids. Or, you cook on Sunday stuff he has to reheat for Mon and Tues and then he cooks W-Th and then you get takeout or one of you cooks Fri and Sat.
I agree that you have a bit of a marriage/communication problem, not just a food problem, so maybe address it like that and your husband will see the importance of the issue. |
Good lord. Why does OP have to complain about anything? Either shut up and eat what he cooks, or get up and cook yourself. WTF? |
+1 I think the person doing dinner with kids should get some goodwill. He might be more receptive to your meals if you approached it as, "I know it's a lot of work to make dinner and take care of the kids every night, what's something I could prep in advance to lighten the load" rather than "you suck so I'll leave a good meal for you all to eat." |
| Get a crockpot and set it to cook while you are at work once and a while. |
| Adult picky eaters are some of the most annoying things on the planet. I have a friend who literally has a list of things she “won’t eat”. Literally, grow up. I’m with OP. Raise kids to eat better. |
| What an ungrateful woman. Feel sorry for your DH and kids. |
| If you don't like it, do it yourself. Seriously. Adjust your hours or cook more on the weekends. |
| Or have later dinner. 8pm even for little kids is a standard dinner time in parts of Europe and Latin America. |
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No one should be complaining about food in front of the kids.
You should not be complaining about the fact that he cooks every weeknight! That's amazing. He should also not be complaining about the food that you make. No one should "yuck" someone's "yum." No one. It's also an important lesson in ethnic diversity and global cuisines. |
^Op said she has tried cooking herself, but her dh and kids complain her stuff is gross. Surely there's a compromise between dh and Op's extremes. |
| My DH is picky and so are the kids, despite my best efforts. DH cooks about 25% of the time and he wouldn’t make anything that he doesn’t like/won’t eat himself. It’s not great, but I’m used to it I guess. Like, if I want to have any green vegetable other than spinach or zucchini, it’s on me to cook and consume, because the others won’t touch it. |