Anonymous wrote:I’m a 37 year old healthy fit vegetarian and her menu sounds delish. Breakfast is also my favorite meal. Not sure I see a problem? Could be a little heavier on veggies but it’s not like my kids eat veggies either.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with PPs that you should compromise and serve one thing from her approved list plus introduce new dinner foods at the same time. You are most likely to discover new things she will eat this way and the exposure will normalize for her that she will not always be served her favorite foods. Your DH should back off on demanding she eat certain foods and getting visibly frustrated when she doesn’t though— it’s self defeating and likely causing her to dig in her heels.
ALSO
Can you point me to recipes for both banana flax oat thing and your various pancakes because my breakfast loving 4 yr old would enjoy both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You consider beans a breakfast food???
It sounds fine to me. She’s eating a big variety of foods. Who cares if she doesn’t like meat and “kid food”?
Op here. I studied abroad in the UK and guess it stuck with me
Omg I'm dying. Sorry to go off topic but the idea that someone spent four months in college in London and now considers beans a breakfast food is hilarious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You consider beans a breakfast food???
It sounds fine to me. She’s eating a big variety of foods. Who cares if she doesn’t like meat and “kid food”?
Op here. I studied abroad in the UK and guess it stuck with me
Omg I'm dying. Sorry to go off topic but the idea that someone spent four months in college in London and now considers beans a breakfast food is hilarious.
Why? They were introduced to it and decided it was something they enjoyed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You consider beans a breakfast food???
It sounds fine to me. She’s eating a big variety of foods. Who cares if she doesn’t like meat and “kid food”?
Op here. I studied abroad in the UK and guess it stuck with me
Omg I'm dying. Sorry to go off topic but the idea that someone spent four months in college in London and now considers beans a breakfast food is hilarious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You consider beans a breakfast food???
It sounds fine to me. She’s eating a big variety of foods. Who cares if she doesn’t like meat and “kid food”?
Op here. I studied abroad in the UK and guess it stuck with me
Anonymous wrote:
You consider beans a breakfast food???
It sounds fine to me. She’s eating a big variety of foods. Who cares if she doesn’t like meat and “kid food”?
I will say, mine really does not like the nightshades including potatoes- even french fries. There is something about them that turns them off- so we don't really push those. He also doesn't like any seasoning beyond salt. Both of those are things we could not change.Anonymous wrote:Sounds like she is a budding vegetarian.
You can add veggies slowly.
I have a picky eater.
We bought 1/4 cup tasting bowls and started with one leaf of spinach. Once he could eat that before dinner, we added a second leaf. And built it up to a salad amount. Added cucumber and carrots the same way. The roasted broccoli. roasted brussels sprouts..... Always have a tasting bowl to eat before dinner. So you can add various foods - slowly they will added up to more variety.
She is actually starting with a decent variety of food with grains, eggs, fruits, legumes...
How does she like macncheese?