How nice to be in an economic class where you don't have to say 'no' to your kids. I'm solid middle class but just because my kid want something 'healthy' doesn't mean I buy it. My kids prefer raspberries but I buy strawberries because they're a better value. |
This is the quoted PP. Literally drinking one now. You could absolutely add one to a smoothie or add one of the savory ones to a soup. Last week their newsletter had a recipe for mixing one to make overnight oats b I haven’t tried it. Not sure about yogurt. Again it’s not exactly like a powder. You mix with water and shake for two minutes and the fruit/veg slightly reconstitutes/thickens. So I don’t know if the yogurt would have enough water for it to absorb. But maybe. You could certainly blend with a water and yogurt. |
Are strawberries always a better value? We buy big bags of frozen berries all year as well as fresh when in season. My kids prefer blueberries and sometimes, in season, they are cheaper than strawberries. But bananas are cheapest of all and if saving money is what matters most, you’d be saving a lot more just feeding your kids bananas and not any berries of any kind. That said, are you really saving THAT much on strawberries vs. raspberries? Enough that it’s worth you kids looking back and saying “Mom was so cheap that she never let us have raspberries because they were 50 cents more per lb.” |
Have you tried all the flavors? What is up with baobob? |
I've tried all the flavors. They all have a mix of things. I just looked at my stash and the baobab is in Amber which also has passion fruit banana dates apple baobab yellow beetroot chia seeds turmeric To me it just tastes healthy--not sweet but not pungent. I don't sit and savor them. I just drink one each day mid-afternoon. And I have a second if I don't have a very nutrient dense dinner. My kids will drink some of them, but in general they don't like them. I sometimes add a shot glass size hit of fresh juice or for a few of them I sometimes use almond milk. The main difference I notice is my skin is better. I'm generally healthy but I'm not passionate about food so I mostly eat the same rotation of things day after day. |
I just remember my mom doing that with bread and soap. So we really were poor. Not just DCUM poor. My mom would buy the cheapest bread and bar soap. Sometimes the difference between the cheapest and the next one up was pennies. Like the store brand loaf was 4 cents cheaper than a local brand. My guess is that at a loaf a week, it took her months of saving that 4 cents per loaf before it translated into a “free loaf” from the savings. Same for soap. Worse, the soap made me itch. I remember begging for ivory. The answer was always no, we can’t afford it. Ivory was one of the first things I bought when I got a little under the table job. Now, I understand why mom did it. She had no other options. However, PP says she’s solidly middle class. The strawberry thing seems so controlling and a type of disordered eating that they have to always eat the cheaper choice. |
Hold up lady. Are you saying it’s weird for anyone, not to mention a child, to be hungry when their last meal was TWELVE hours ago?? |
Or a teen could, I don’t know, get a job if they want expensive stuff |
What jobs can teens get in this economy? We see adults bagging groceries, walking dogs, and knocking on doors to mow lawns. |
Bagging groceries, walking dogs, tutoring, mowing lawns, etc. Parents make that excuse for their kids a lot. They have to call around. Grocery stores are hiring. |
They are hiring adults. |
Stop projecting. Nobody said it wasn't nutritious, just that it was unhelpful--likely to weightloss. Chewing increases feelings of satiety. |
So irrelevant to whether it's nutritious, or calorie dense or not. Is it making your daughter fat or your son gain weight? Whether it's hot or cold isn't the deciding factor. |
Try an expert, or lacking that ability, Google. |
Ah, so you don't know and you have no evidence. Our nutritionists and medical experts have said liquid nutrition is perfectly acceptable. |