Anonymous wrote:We use a standard Thermos brand thermos for warm lunches. The key is to fill it with boiling water, seal the lid, and let it sit for 5 minutes while you heat the food in the morning. Then empty it, dry it out, and fill with your hot food. Pre-heating the container helps keep the food hot a lot longer than it would if you put the food directly into a cold container.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why?? Just pack a sandwich.
Our dinner leftovers are healthier than a sandwich and it’s easier to put a Pyrex container in the microwave and then put the food in a thermos than to make a sandwich.
Exactly, my kids love leftovers of our healthy dinners (stews, pasta/rice dishes, etc.) and it's no more trouble for me to heat up leftovers than to pull out all the sandwich components. We use Thermos brand, too. I usually skip the hot water trick and just heat up extra hot. They tell me the food is still warm at lunchtime, but not hot.
Anonymous wrote:Above PP again. If your school is nut free and your kid likes PB try switching to sunflower butter. It looks the same and has same texture. Just a different flavor.
Anonymous wrote:I do the preheating the thermos with boiling water which seems to help. However, I have realized that not all hot foot containers keep the heat in very well. I have bought 2 different brands and as a test I filled them both with hot water in the morning and only one of them kept the water hot by lunchtime, the other was lukewarm (which I returned). We currently use the Thermos brand as they seem to be the best.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just use a regular Thermos (maybe the Funtainer?). I fill it with hot water and let it sit while I heat up the food. It stays warm enough for lunch.
Not OP, but my kid swears everything is still cold/room temperature by lunchtime even though I use this process (and I pack it at 8 for lunch at 1230). Does yours really stay hot for several hours?
Np and yes it stays hot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why?? Just pack a sandwich.
Our dinner leftovers are healthier than a sandwich and it’s easier to put a Pyrex container in the microwave and then put the food in a thermos than to make a sandwich.
Anonymous wrote:I do the preheating the thermos with boiling water which seems to help. However, I have realized that not all hot foot containers keep the heat in very well. I have bought 2 different brands and as a test I filled them both with hot water in the morning and only one of them kept the water hot by lunchtime, the other was lukewarm (which I returned). We currently use the Thermos brand as they seem to be the best.