Anonymous wrote:Last night:
Jimmy Johns sandwich (at dance class break)
Came home and had 2 corndogs, cantaloupe.
Who wants to eat the same thing for dinner 3 nights in a row though??
Anonymous wrote:Here's our for the week:
Sunday, take out pizza coming home from something. I made a spinach smoothie for one teen to go with it.
Monday -- veggie tacos, with soyrizo, scrambled eggs, black beans, cheese, and one teen added tomatos. (I added avocado to mine, but they wouldn't).
Tuesday -- pasta with sausage. One teen added tomatos, the other didn't. I also added arugula to mine
Wednesday -- grilled salmon with orzo and peas.
Tonight is chicken wings and carrot sticks and whatever starch I can figure out (maybe I can get the teens to pick up bread for garlic bread?)
Friday is lentil enchiladas, assuming I can get home from work in time to make that. (I use the precooked TJ lentils, so it's usually an under-30-min dinner.)
We basically live on pasta and tortillas in my house. Basically all these meals take 15-30 minutes. I just got an induction stove that boils water in just a couple minutes, so that's really helpful on the pasta front.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our children have always eaten the same meals that are prepared for the adults? I don't understand this American custom of making separate meals for children?
I am not American but my eldest will not eat the food we prepare. She will try but she is freaked out by foods with strong smells or flavors, foods with combined ingredients, and most meat. We try not to prepare her separate meals but it is not at all uncommon for her to only eat, for instance, rice and one vegetable side out of everything served. We will often supplement with greek yogurt or a simple bean paste so she gets some protein, but she will not eat most of what we eat.
I think some children are just picky. My husband was reportedly the same way, and I will admit that as a kid there were many dinners where I just picked at the edges of my food and didn't eat much. I would fill up on breakfast and lunch which tended to have fewer heavy, savory items. Those are precisely the foods my own kid avoids now too.
I am not saying this to judge, but have you considered therapy for sensory sensitivity or ARFID for your kid? My oldest is also like this, and I kept putting off doing anything about it, becuase I was also picky as a kid and was doing all the suggested things about bridge foods and gradually expanding palate, etc. But she's in college now and it is really challenging--I know she wishes she could eat more and is trying, but she has less time now to do actualy therapy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I appreciate this thread. My husband made a delicious stew on Monday night, which he and I have been enjoying all week. But my kids won't eat stew, so they have eaten: greek yogurt, peas (at least one or two actual peas, I saw the peas go into their mouths, the rest were left on plates), PB&J, cheerios, strawberries, French fries, bagel with cream cheese, rice and beans.
I am currently trying to plan tonights dinner and come up with a dish that they will actually eat. It's so hard. I might do tacos, which they will eat if we crumble the shells and call it nachos but use the same ingredients. Sigh.
Who wants to eat the same thing for dinner 3 nights in a row though??
I try not to make meals I know my kids will absolutely refuse. However if they really don't like something, it's up to them to figure it out. For my one kid that usually means cheese and crackers and the other one will really eat whatever we eat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our children have always eaten the same meals that are prepared for the adults? I don't understand this American custom of making separate meals for children?
I am not American but my eldest will not eat the food we prepare. She will try but she is freaked out by foods with strong smells or flavors, foods with combined ingredients, and most meat. We try not to prepare her separate meals but it is not at all uncommon for her to only eat, for instance, rice and one vegetable side out of everything served. We will often supplement with greek yogurt or a simple bean paste so she gets some protein, but she will not eat most of what we eat.
I think some children are just picky. My husband was reportedly the same way, and I will admit that as a kid there were many dinners where I just picked at the edges of my food and didn't eat much. I would fill up on breakfast and lunch which tended to have fewer heavy, savory items. Those are precisely the foods my own kid avoids now too.
Anonymous wrote:Chipotle. Bonus he picked it up himself and now has enough for lunch the next day. Two meals in one.