Anonymous wrote:Buy cheaper food. Strawberries are expensive and out of season.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Six yogurts"? Do you mean that you're buying those little individual flavored/ sweetened yogurts? Fancy! Nothing like that in my house. It's a big tub of plain whole milk yogurt. When the kids were young, I put a little decorative sugar in it. Like a quarter teaspoon. Sometimes two colors, for mixing fun.
Anyway, no, do not limit food for your healthy kids.
DO shop smarter. Larger containers instead of little individual ones. (Ideally, nothing individually wrapped. It adds to the price and is often highly processed.) In-season fruit.
OP - I tend to buy individual containers (0% sugar greek yogurt) because when I buy large containers they take WAY more than a serving size. This way I can try and monitor how many servings they are eating.
But then they take more than one small container, so the only difference is increased cost and increased plastic waste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Six yogurts"? Do you mean that you're buying those little individual flavored/ sweetened yogurts? Fancy! Nothing like that in my house. It's a big tub of plain whole milk yogurt. When the kids were young, I put a little decorative sugar in it. Like a quarter teaspoon. Sometimes two colors, for mixing fun.
Anyway, no, do not limit food for your healthy kids.
DO shop smarter. Larger containers instead of little individual ones. (Ideally, nothing individually wrapped. It adds to the price and is often highly processed.) In-season fruit.
OP - I tend to buy individual containers (0% sugar greek yogurt) because when I buy large containers they take WAY more than a serving size. This way I can try and monitor how many servings they are eating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't limit food - from healthy calories. I do limit servings of expensive food like strawberries they can have. No strawberries for a snack. That can be apples and bananas and oranges etc.
buy yogurt in big tubs and have them spoon it and add home made granola etc.
I shop sales for those things.
Terrible parenting
You sound awful
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe you shouldn’t have three children if you can’t afford to feed them. It’s extremely poor parenting to consider giving your kids an eating disorder so you can cut back on groceries.
OP - I just don't understand how kids eat so much. I don't think I ever did as a kid. I probably eat around 1300 calories now as an adult and I work out every day. I have to consciously work to eat 1500 calories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Six yogurts"? Do you mean that you're buying those little individual flavored/ sweetened yogurts? Fancy! Nothing like that in my house. It's a big tub of plain whole milk yogurt. When the kids were young, I put a little decorative sugar in it. Like a quarter teaspoon. Sometimes two colors, for mixing fun.
Anyway, no, do not limit food for your healthy kids.
DO shop smarter. Larger containers instead of little individual ones. (Ideally, nothing individually wrapped. It adds to the price and is often highly processed.) In-season fruit.
OP - I tend to buy individual containers (0% sugar greek yogurt) because when I buy large containers they take WAY more than a serving size. This way I can try and monitor how many servings they are eating.
My 5 year old boy is actually the worst offender. He just eats ALL DAY. He doesn't ever stop. His general meal:
Breakfast: yogurt, toast and pancakes
Snack: fruit and some pretzels (or something like that)
Lunch: At daycare thankfully
Snack: Fruit or string cheese or both or some more yogurt
Dinner: Some sort of protein, carb, veggie and fruit - example salmon, rice, broccoli and cut up strawberries or chicken rice bowl with veggies
Snack before bed: Protein shake, banana with peanut butter
He eats dinner early due to his older siblings sports practices (around 5pm) so by 8pm he is usually hungry again before bed. He is 55 pounds and just turned 5 years old and is in the 99th percentile for height. The eating never ends.
Anonymous wrote:Your grocery bill is insanely cheap for 5 people.
Anonymous wrote:Buy cheaper food. Strawberries are expensive and out of season.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe you shouldn’t have three children if you can’t afford to feed them. It’s extremely poor parenting to consider giving your kids an eating disorder so you can cut back on groceries.
Anonymous wrote:"Six yogurts"? Do you mean that you're buying those little individual flavored/ sweetened yogurts? Fancy! Nothing like that in my house. It's a big tub of plain whole milk yogurt. When the kids were young, I put a little decorative sugar in it. Like a quarter teaspoon. Sometimes two colors, for mixing fun.
Anyway, no, do not limit food for your healthy kids.
DO shop smarter. Larger containers instead of little individual ones. (Ideally, nothing individually wrapped. It adds to the price and is often highly processed.) In-season fruit.
Anonymous wrote:If the food is too expensive, buy cheaper food. Strawberries and melons are a treat. Eat a banana.