Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just out of curiosity -- how big a bag of cheese? How many tortillas did you use and how many pounds of chicken?
Those are random questions lol
It was a bag of Mexican blend cheese. The bag says it is 1 and a 1/4 cup. I know because I buy them all the time. I used 8 chicken thighs and cut them off the bones and grilled them that way. I used a whole onion and 4 big peppers. We had a bag of 10 flour tortillas.
Sigh. Still not enough. You have a REAL problem OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just out of curiosity -- how big a bag of cheese? How many tortillas did you use and how many pounds of chicken?
Those are random questions lol
It was a bag of Mexican blend cheese. The bag says it is 1 and a 1/4 cup. I know because I buy them all the time. I used 8 chicken thighs and cut them off the bones and grilled them that way. I used a whole onion and 4 big peppers. We had a bag of 10 flour tortillas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just out of curiosity -- how big a bag of cheese? How many tortillas did you use and how many pounds of chicken?
Those are random questions lol
It was a bag of Mexican blend cheese. The bag says it is 1 and a 1/4 cup. I know because I buy them all the time. I used 8 chicken thighs and cut them off the bones and grilled them that way. I used a whole onion and 4 big peppers. We had a bag of 10 flour tortillas.
Anonymous wrote:Just out of curiosity -- how big a bag of cheese? How many tortillas did you use and how many pounds of chicken?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have just died laughing at this thread, every aspect: the fact that my two boys will start eating us out of house and home in a few years - which we knew, my husband has regaled me with tales of his teenaged appetite, the teeny portions OP serves and the way some PPs have described it, the long lists of what groceries other PPs kids burn through in a few days... Oh my god, this thread is great!
+1
I think it was the reference to serving a family of 6 "a" rack of ribs that killed me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again
My eldest sons play soccer and ice hockey 3x a week. Anytime I try to give them a soup for dinner they freak out and basically refuse to eat it. Last week I made 10 chicken legs for dinner. Every last one was eaten in about 25 mins. When I feed them till they are full, it's like preparing a meal for an army. They managed to eat 10 potatoes worth of mashed potatoes the other day. I cooked a rack of ribs and they were still hungry after.
A rack of ribs each? or one rack total? One rack is definitely not enough. 10 chicken legs? I would think teenage boys would eat 4-5 each, my 8 year old will eat 2-3. Seems to me you are not making nearly enough food, especially for an active family.
Anonymous wrote:Op again
My eldest sons play soccer and ice hockey 3x a week. Anytime I try to give them a soup for dinner they freak out and basically refuse to eat it. Last week I made 10 chicken legs for dinner. Every last one was eaten in about 25 mins. When I feed them till they are full, it's like preparing a meal for an army. They managed to eat 10 potatoes worth of mashed potatoes the other day. I cooked a rack of ribs and they were still hungry after.
Anonymous wrote:I have just died laughing at this thread, every aspect: the fact that my two boys will start eating us out of house and home in a few years - which we knew, my husband has regaled me with tales of his teenaged appetite, the teeny portions OP serves and the way some PPs have described it, the long lists of what groceries other PPs kids burn through in a few days... Oh my god, this thread is great!
Anonymous wrote:I keep coming back to comment on this thread. OP seems to be hoping to garner support to convince her DH and growing teens that their food needs are excessive and that they should be satisfied with what she serves. I don't know what motivates someone to deny real hunger for healthy, non-overweight people especially growing teens.