Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not all sausage is heavily processed. There are some varieties of ground fresh sausage that are basically just ground meat and spice.
" The trouble, as Jill Pell remarks, is that most of the bacon labelled as nitrate-free in the US “isn’t nitrate-free”. It’s made with nitrates taken from celery extract, which may be natural, but produces exactly the same N-nitroso compounds in the meat. Under EU regulation, this bacon would not be allowed to be labelled “nitrate-free”."
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2018/mar/01/bacon-cancer-processed-meats-nitrates-nitrites-sausages
Anonymous wrote:She is a bit heavy - all in her belly, and I suspect much of it is pre-puberty weight gain. There are a number of other girls in her class with similar bodies right now. She’s generally a healthy eater at home, she does like sweets but we limit those to weekends and special occasions, and she will sometimes mindlessly grab a snack if she’s not actually hungry but I think she’s also recognizing that more.
We do 2% milk. I’m going to try to up the protein. Maybe some chicken breakfast sausage (though I keep reading about the horrors of processed meat so...)
Anonymous wrote:Dh is convinced that our 9yo dd is overweight because she eats unhealthy things for breakfast. While I don’t completely agree, I am committed to finding healthier options and incorporating them into our routine. I’d love advice for healthy breakfast foods - I know there’s no “rule” that you need to eat certain things for breakfast but my kids won’t go for things like leftover dinner food.
Currently they have something from the following -
Eggs (scrambled, sunny side up, hard boiled)
Toast with nut butter or cinnamon toast (multigrain bread)
Cereal - Cheerios or Rice Krispies with 2% milk
Oatmeal
Sunbutter and jam sandwiches on multigrain slim sandwich rounds
Occasionally bread with Jason’s chocolate hazelnut butter.
On weekends we make some sort of baked treat one day and have a simpler breakfast the other
9yo detests all fruit except raspberries, blueberries and applesauce. She also doesn’t like most yogurts and won’t drink smoothies. She has a very sensitive sense of smell.
For snacks I give veggies, healthy muffins that I make, occasionally crackers or snap pea crisps, popcorn, cheese, olives, etc. My other kids eat a lot of fruit for snacks, but again, she’ll only eat a select few.
Since I’ve told dh I will serve healthier breakfasts (he doesn’t think any cereal is healthy), I’m looking for new ideas!
Anonymous wrote:Dh is convinced that our 9yo dd is overweight because she eats unhealthy things for breakfast. While I don’t completely agree, I am committed to finding healthier options and incorporating them into our routine. I’d love advice for healthy breakfast foods - I know there’s no “rule” that you need to eat certain things for breakfast but my kids won’t go for things like leftover dinner food.
Currently they have something from the following -
Eggs (scrambled, sunny side up, hard boiled)
Toast with nut butter or cinnamon toast (multigrain bread)
Cereal - Cheerios or Rice Krispies with 2% milk
Oatmeal
Sunbutter and jam sandwiches on multigrain slim sandwich rounds
Occasionally bread with Jason’s chocolate hazelnut butter.
On weekends we make some sort of baked treat one day and have a simpler breakfast the other
9yo detests all fruit except raspberries, blueberries and applesauce. She also doesn’t like most yogurts and won’t drink smoothies. She has a very sensitive sense of smell.
For snacks I give veggies, healthy muffins that I make, occasionally crackers or snap pea crisps, popcorn, cheese, olives, etc. My other kids eat a lot of fruit for snacks, but again, she’ll only eat a select few.
Since I’ve told dh I will serve healthier breakfasts (he doesn’t think any cereal is healthy), I’m looking for new ideas!