Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids love tuna, specifically cold tuna pasta salad. I add celery, cucumbers, tomatoes, peppers, green onions and a dill-lemonade-mayo dressing. They request this every week in summer.
In winter I make a hot version of Tuna Helper from scratch only I actually use canned salmon and call it tuna.
One of my kids also likes sashimi though the other won't eat it. I get it from the grocery store for a treat.
Our pediatrician wants kids to eat seafood at least oce a week.
OP here, that's more or less what my mother made -- just mayo and salt and pepper instead of a dressing. My kids adore pasta, love celery, cucumbers and sometiems peppers, but adamantly refuse to eat salad dressing of any kind. They eat mayo--but only when they don't know it.
They're very difficult, but, in general, the things they eat are very healthy (raw fruits and vegetables, grilled chicken, salmon)... they'll eat salmon, so maybe that's an idea of how to ease them into it. I haven't tried tuna steak, but they like swordfish.
I guess my problem is they're very unpredictable in their pickiness, and I'm just trying to steer them towards somethings that are predictable and easy -- like a can of tuna!
I assumed that Tuna Helper is basically a boxed version of Tuna Casserole, and was thinking maybe they'd be convinced by the Helper logo... if they eat I can maybe work up a tuna casserole and then we'll be on to tuna sandwiches!
Honestly I would focus more on trying to introduce the tuna in cold dishes, like the pasta salads others have mentioned. Do they like egg salad at all? If so you can try adding some tuna to that. As someone who loves tuna, I cannot stomach tuna casserole, from scratch or from a box. I don’t think it’s the best way to make tuna appealing to already picky eaters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids love tuna, specifically cold tuna pasta salad. I add celery, cucumbers, tomatoes, peppers, green onions and a dill-lemonade-mayo dressing. They request this every week in summer.
In winter I make a hot version of Tuna Helper from scratch only I actually use canned salmon and call it tuna.
One of my kids also likes sashimi though the other won't eat it. I get it from the grocery store for a treat.
Our pediatrician wants kids to eat seafood at least oce a week.
OP here, that's more or less what my mother made -- just mayo and salt and pepper instead of a dressing. My kids adore pasta, love celery, cucumbers and sometiems peppers, but adamantly refuse to eat salad dressing of any kind. They eat mayo--but only when they don't know it.
They're very difficult, but, in general, the things they eat are very healthy (raw fruits and vegetables, grilled chicken, salmon)... they'll eat salmon, so maybe that's an idea of how to ease them into it. I haven't tried tuna steak, but they like swordfish.
I guess my problem is they're very unpredictable in their pickiness, and I'm just trying to steer them towards somethings that are predictable and easy -- like a can of tuna!
I assumed that Tuna Helper is basically a boxed version of Tuna Casserole, and was thinking maybe they'd be convinced by the Helper logo... if they eat I can maybe work up a tuna casserole and then we'll be on to tuna sandwiches!
Anonymous wrote:Canned tuna really is not healthy. The mercury levels are off the charts. But, if you are one to feed your children something called Hamburger Helper (shudders) then by all means go right ahead.
Anonymous wrote:My kids love tuna, specifically cold tuna pasta salad. I add celery, cucumbers, tomatoes, peppers, green onions and a dill-lemonade-mayo dressing. They request this every week in summer.
In winter I make a hot version of Tuna Helper from scratch only I actually use canned salmon and call it tuna.
One of my kids also likes sashimi though the other won't eat it. I get it from the grocery store for a treat.
Our pediatrician wants kids to eat seafood at least oce a week.
Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with a mock hamburger helper made from scratch? I used to eat the box kind as a kid, but now, as an adult, I make my own from scratch.
My ingredients are lean ground beef, almond milk, pasta, spices, cheddar cheese, freshly chopped garlic, onions, fresh chopped parsley, and olive oil. Wonder what other foods the pp would "shudder" at.
Anonymous wrote:I think if I was going to use food chaining with something familiar to accustom my kids to tuna, I'd do mac and cheese, however you usually prepare it, and add a small amount of tuna, shredded fine and stirred in well.
If your kids don't eat mac and cheese, obviously that changes things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Canned tuna really is not healthy. The mercury levels are off the charts. But, if you are one to feed your children something called Hamburger Helper (shudders) then by all means go right ahead.
A@@hole.
-not OP
Anonymous wrote:Canned tuna really is not healthy. The mercury levels are off the charts. But, if you are one to feed your children something called Hamburger Helper (shudders) then by all means go right ahead.