Yes, of course I know that, but this is an issue that comes up with a variety of meals. It just happened to be shrimp on the particular night that I wrote this. The shrimp he ate was also sauteed in butter, and there were plenty of other things like pasta and bean soup and whole milk and dessert that had calories. |
| Wut desert |
Stfu |
Why would anyone drink whole milk with this meal? Ewwww. |
Why not fooo? |
Teen boy athletes who are starving all the time. |
You aren’t making enough food. I make about a pound of children per kid per meal of boneless skinless breasts. This is for my son and daughter. 4 oz servings would be really tiny for either of them. I think my daughter eats more than my teen son. |
| Chicken!!! Not children. Terrible autocorrect |
đź’Ż |
Sure, sure
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I dont think you are serving enough food op. You need other more filling proteins. Make a meatloaf, make bbq chicken thighs ( he needs at least 4), make some drumsticks or make a roast. Unless shrimp is brought served with steak or at lunchtime I would take shrimp off the menu. Not for expense bit its simply not filling enough. A bag of frozen shrimp is relatively cheap. What does your husband eat? Is your spouse stopping to eat a burger on the way home?
You telling him to eat beans when he wants meat is dismissive. He does need to understand the cost of food and budgetary limits though but you shouldn't be dave ramsey telling him to eat beans and rice |
| I can appreciate that you are trying to budget, but judging by the meals you referenced serving, I don’t think you are actually in a situation where you wouldn’t be able to afford more of the non-veg protein. If this has repeatedly come up, which it sounds like it has, you need to serve more of the food your son actually wants to eat. It’s honestly a bit controlling to be this rigid about the portion sizes another person eats when you are making healthy meals. Go back to Ellyn Satter, like you did with toddlers. You decide what is served, the child decides which foods he will eat and how much. And a 4 or 5 oz portion of fish is nothing for a teen athlete and he shouldn’t have to guzzle whole milk because you are dismissing his appetite. |
| And if you are talking uncooked weights...a 4 oz burger cooked or a pound of raw meat divided in quarters? |
She is saying 8-10 oz of meat per teen which is more than enough. The teens can either eat other food or use their allowance to buy meat. |
And yet repeatedly her son is still hungry for more and being offered lentils and milk. |