Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids are often surprised by things that they assume is normal because of what happens at their house. I’ve never served just pasta. It often has a protein (even a vegetarian one like beans or tofu) and always a vegetable. Nothing wrong with your way—it’s just how we do it at my house so maybe my kids would be surprised too? But I hope they wouldn’t say it to the host.
When other kids seem rude to me, I don’t get upset, I just use it as a learning experience for my kids. Remind them that they can compliment the food or say “no thank you”, but other comments are unnecessary.
I think it was the mother that said it- not the kid....
Ohhh I definitely missed that!
Yeah that’s a weird comment from an adult. She’s probably carb-a-phobicdon’t take it personally
Anonymous wrote:It’s weird to not offer a salad or vegetable or fruit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Husband and I are both Italian. His parents “are off the boat”. My grandparents were too and my parents were born in this country.
We have always had pasta for lunch or dinner.
I was with my kids (girl age 6 and boy 4) and a friend and her kids at a park. I invited them back to our house for lunch.
I made pasta-penne with butter for the kids and vodka sauce for myself and my friend.
She looked at it and said “is this lunch? A bowl of pasta?”
I said yes this is what we usually have. She looked at me oddly and didn’t say anything else and ate.
But what a weird response.
Did the mom or the kid say that? Either way I would not consider plain buttered noodles an appropriate lunch for a kid. Why wouldn't you throw some tomato sauce and cheese on there at least? I'm not afraid of carbs and I serve pasta all the time but not just plain buttered pasta.
My kid loves buttered pasta. That's why. I'm not even OP.
Ok but do you serve that as the only item with the meal? No fruits or veggies on the side?
Anonymous wrote:I think it sounds delicious and sounds like your friend was envious- she probably serves up goldfish, Dino nuggets, and fruit snacks for lunch at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Husband and I are both Italian. His parents “are off the boat”. My grandparents were too and my parents were born in this country.
We have always had pasta for lunch or dinner.
I was with my kids (girl age 6 and boy 4) and a friend and her kids at a park. I invited them back to our house for lunch.
I made pasta-penne with butter for the kids and vodka sauce for myself and my friend.
She looked at it and said “is this lunch? A bowl of pasta?”
I said yes this is what we usually have. She looked at me oddly and didn’t say anything else and ate.
But what a weird response.
Did the mom or the kid say that? Either way I would not consider plain buttered noodles an appropriate lunch for a kid. Why wouldn't you throw some tomato sauce and cheese on there at least? I'm not afraid of carbs and I serve pasta all the time but not just plain buttered pasta.
My kid loves buttered pasta. That's why. I'm not even OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Husband and I are both Italian. His parents “are off the boat”. My grandparents were too and my parents were born in this country.
We have always had pasta for lunch or dinner.
I was with my kids (girl age 6 and boy 4) and a friend and her kids at a park. I invited them back to our house for lunch.
I made pasta-penne with butter for the kids and vodka sauce for myself and my friend.
She looked at it and said “is this lunch? A bowl of pasta?”
I said yes this is what we usually have. She looked at me oddly and didn’t say anything else and ate.
But what a weird response.
Did the mom or the kid say that? Either way I would not consider plain buttered noodles an appropriate lunch for a kid. Why wouldn't you throw some tomato sauce and cheese on there at least? I'm not afraid of carbs and I serve pasta all the time but not just plain buttered pasta.
Anonymous wrote:Husband and I are both Italian. His parents “are off the boat”. My grandparents were too and my parents were born in this country.
We have always had pasta for lunch or dinner.
I was with my kids (girl age 6 and boy 4) and a friend and her kids at a park. I invited them back to our house for lunch.
I made pasta-penne with butter for the kids and vodka sauce for myself and my friend.
She looked at it and said “is this lunch? A bowl of pasta?”
I said yes this is what we usually have. She looked at me oddly and didn’t say anything else and ate.
But what a weird response.
Anonymous wrote:I'd toss some chicken in there. You're just feeding your kids carbs as a meal.