Anonymous wrote:My 6th grade son loves Ravioli in his thermos. If he's taking a home lunch, 99% of the time that's what he'll have. Then he gets baby carrots, some sort of fruit and a "treat"---pudding cup, pack of mini cookies, etc.
When my 3rd grader takes a home lunch, he likes a sandwich--usually PB&J, which is allowed at his school. Then I put in something crunchy: pirates booty, cheez-its, pretzels, goldfish, etc. A fruit and/or veggie: baby carrots, apple slices, berries, yogurt, etc. A treat for him too, along the lines of his brother.
I'd love to be that mom who makes prize-winning bento style lunches, but trust me, my kids would complain!!
Anonymous wrote:Last nights leftovers packed in a thermos - ranges from pasta, to curry, to roast chicken, fish, hamburger etc. A fruit or vegetable - apples, carrots, cucumbers, banana. Milk with an ice pack.
Anonymous wrote:For hot lunch - get a thermos. You can get one at Target - the Funtainer one for about $15 or something like that. Boil water, then pour it into the thermos and close the lid. Keep for 10min. @ 10min - Heat up the food - pasta, rice, soups, whatever. Pour out the water from the thermos; optional - dry the thermos inside. Put the hot food in the thermos.
I have one of those lunch bags that have two sections. I put hot food in one of the sections with something underneath the thermos to keep the warm/cold separate as much as possible.
For the cold stuff, milk, cheese, fruit, I put it in another section with an ice pack.
My kids have told me that the food is still warm.
The only bad thing about this is that a Ker has a hard time opening the thermos. But, there is usually a lunch aide that helps kids open containers and stuff. I used to volunteer at my Ker's lunch and spent the entire lunch period opening containers, yogurt packs, etc.
Food-wise, I do pastas - usually from leftovers the night before; stir fry rice, or soup and rice (rice separate). I also pack seaweed with the rice. Kids love it. Pastas can be simple. Mac/cheese, pasta with butter sauce or garlic/olive oil with/out sausage, ham, chicken, tomatoes, grilled zuchini or steamed brocolli.
My DD doesn't like sandwiches, but she does like ham, so I will pack ham and cheese, fruit.
Anonymous wrote:All kinds of random shit. Each day I send some form of fruit and some form of veggie. Sometimes soup in a thermos, falafel, mini pita pockets with hummus, sandwich of pb&j or tomato and avocado, turkey, etc. cheese and crackers although she dislikes warm cheese.