Anonymous wrote:I've been cooking dinner every night for my wife and kids for the past 30 years. I enjoy it. I clean up and wash every thing and put everything away. I even do the groceries. Each of us does our own laundry, ironing, and cleaning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And there is no reason that your kids can’t handle dinner one day a week, once they are 12 or 14. Your husband could do one night and you can eat out or order out another.
NP. My kids know how to cook, but by 12 or 14, they’re never home on week nights in time to cook dinner… they’re at sports practices or other activities. I’m sure that’s true for many/most people.
OP, I know a couple who cooked meals for the whole week every Sunday.
Re-evaluate your schedule so a teen can set aside one night a week to make dinner. See research of the importance of family dinner and cut back just a bit on activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have lots of thoughts and they may not work for you but I’ve always worked full-time, as has my husband, and our twins are 10 so I haven’t been doing this forever but it’s been a while.
- Your husband needs to help with this responsibility. There is no reason he can’t be equally in charge of food. If his work schedule doesn’t allow him to actually cook at dinner time, he can still come up with meals, place a pick up grocery order, prep stuff, etc.
- Your kids need to also take responsibility for this if they are old enough to talk. They should each come up with a dinner once a week. It is not your job to feed multiple people with no input or help. You have a job. You have other things you do. This shouldn’t be all on you.
- You don’t need to have a perfectly balanced dinner all the time. Pizza is fine. Cereal is fine. Don’t strive for perfection, it’ll drive you crazy. It may seem weird to have a banana on the side of a pasta dish but if you don’t have time to steam broccoli, it’s ok. And, gasp, if you serve a dinner that doesn’t have produce on the side, that’s also ok. No one is going to get scurvy because they didn’t have a fruit or vegetable that night.
- Make easier food. Get a rotisserie chicken instead of making one from scratch, for example. Buy pre-chopped vegetables. Do what you can to make the steps easier sometimes.
- Make dinners that allow for customization. We eat a lot of Mexican food, so every week we grill a big batch of chicken, cook peppers and onions, make guacamole, do a huge pot of rice, and make black beans (from a can, I’m not soaking them for hours or anything). From that we get multiple meals that people can customize. Burritos, fajitas, nachos, quesadillas, bowls, salads, etc. I do similar with Asian dishes - sauté vegetables, cook some chicken and often beef, buy some frozen potstickers. Then we can have stir fry, fried rice, potstickers, meatballs, noodles, etc. Depending on the sauce you want to put on, you can make it Korean, Chinese, Thai, etc. That way everyone gets the flavors (I like spicy, my husband prefers salty) and consistency (one kid likes rice, the other prefers noodles) they want.
Cereal is not a fine dinner. WTF.
Is cereal fine for breakfast? What the hell’s the difference?
Anonymous wrote:Delegate. Is there a significant other? They need to be in charge of dinner at least two or three nights a week. Are the kids 7 or older? Each one who is needs to cook one night a week.
Also, some families plan the weeks' dinners together, so everyone has input and understands it might not be their choice one night but it will be another night.
Anonymous wrote:There are some real sanctimommies on this thread! Do none of you have kids with food issues or special needs kids? After 9 pages, I am astounded by how easy some of you seem to have it.
In our family of 4 we all have different dietary needs and other special needs that make a one meal fits all approach really tough.
Anonymous wrote:There are some real sanctimommies on this thread! Do none of you have kids with food issues or special needs kids? After 9 pages, I am astounded by how easy some of you seem to have it.
In our family of 4 we all have different dietary needs and other special needs that make a one meal fits all approach really tough.
Anonymous wrote:This made me ponder my boomer working class childhood in the "meat, potatoes and a vegetable" era. My mom never worked full time but she always had some kind of part time work outside the house and there were 5 kids.
There was no thinking/planning required other than to remember to take meat out of the freezer. We always had a 50 lb burlap bag of potatoes in the basement, from age 7 or so it was my job to peel them. Boiled or mashed. Sometimes baked or fried. Leftover mashed potatoes became potato patties. Cook meat--burger patties or round steak usually or fried chicken, and my mom always made gravy. Open a can of peas, beans, carrots, or corn.
There was some variety like spaghetti some nights, or waffles, or fish (my brothers caught panfish a lot in the summer) something. But I just realized that routine approach had to have made the mental effort a lot easier, and no worries about ingredients on hand or not.
Some news thing I watched or read described an Italian family which has eaten the SAME MEAL (a stew of beans and vegetables and some meat) every night for decades and how healthy and long lived they all are.
How much of the expectation of variety a cultural or SES thing? Do families in Europe or Asia have to figure out what to make every damned day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An easier way to think of this is to ensure that you have staples in your pantry and a handful of memorized, forgiving recipes.
1) Pasta + sauce. Endless variations - spaghetti with marinara; frozen tortellini or penne with pesto (buy from Costco); linguine with frozen shrimp, lemon, and olive oil; spaghetti with fried egg and parm, etc., etc.
2) Rice + protein + veggie. If you're pressed for time, you can get frozen rice from TJs. Protein could be chicken, beef, tofu.
3) Indian simmer sauces + protein + rice or naan.
4) Burritos - use leftover rice, add beans, guac, cheese, and salsa.
5) Big salads. Look up "dense bean salad" and make a giant bowl, serve with baguette. Serve with baguette (I buy from Costco, cut up into sections, and freeze.)
6) Chili with or without meat. This freezes and heats up beautifully. You can actually serve chili with pasta (Cincinnati style) or with rice (Hawaiian style) or over a baked potato.
I do a lot of stuff like this, too. For the meals with rice, I have a rice cooker. You can get good quality rice (any kind you want) at the Asian supermarket.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have lots of thoughts and they may not work for you but I’ve always worked full-time, as has my husband, and our twins are 10 so I haven’t been doing this forever but it’s been a while.
- Your husband needs to help with this responsibility. There is no reason he can’t be equally in charge of food. If his work schedule doesn’t allow him to actually cook at dinner time, he can still come up with meals, place a pick up grocery order, prep stuff, etc.
- Your kids need to also take responsibility for this if they are old enough to talk. They should each come up with a dinner once a week. It is not your job to feed multiple people with no input or help. You have a job. You have other things you do. This shouldn’t be all on you.
- You don’t need to have a perfectly balanced dinner all the time. Pizza is fine. Cereal is fine. Don’t strive for perfection, it’ll drive you crazy. It may seem weird to have a banana on the side of a pasta dish but if you don’t have time to steam broccoli, it’s ok. And, gasp, if you serve a dinner that doesn’t have produce on the side, that’s also ok. No one is going to get scurvy because they didn’t have a fruit or vegetable that night.
- Make easier food. Get a rotisserie chicken instead of making one from scratch, for example. Buy pre-chopped vegetables. Do what you can to make the steps easier sometimes.
- Make dinners that allow for customization. We eat a lot of Mexican food, so every week we grill a big batch of chicken, cook peppers and onions, make guacamole, do a huge pot of rice, and make black beans (from a can, I’m not soaking them for hours or anything). From that we get multiple meals that people can customize. Burritos, fajitas, nachos, quesadillas, bowls, salads, etc. I do similar with Asian dishes - sauté vegetables, cook some chicken and often beef, buy some frozen potstickers. Then we can have stir fry, fried rice, potstickers, meatballs, noodles, etc. Depending on the sauce you want to put on, you can make it Korean, Chinese, Thai, etc. That way everyone gets the flavors (I like spicy, my husband prefers salty) and consistency (one kid likes rice, the other prefers noodles) they want.
Cereal is not a fine dinner. WTF.