Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine is 19m and her major foods are fruits and veg (broccoli, blueberries, bananas and avocado are favorites), any kind of cooked beans, cubes of tofu, cubes of cheese, eggs (usually fried and cut into pieces), oatmeal, yogurt, bread, rice. We offer meat, but so far she isn't into it.
That sounds like a diet! LOL
Yes, we all eat a diet, and this doesn't seem like a terrible one.
I only say this b/c I have an underweight DD and these foods are not really weight gainers.
Not the other PP, but I also have a pretty skinny DD, but we try to eat this way. There are definitely other ways to add in some good fats - avacados, butter, whole milk, cheeses, full-fat yogurt. Our DD does eat meat though, so that gives us the option of chicken and beef.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine is 19m and her major foods are fruits and veg (broccoli, blueberries, bananas and avocado are favorites), any kind of cooked beans, cubes of tofu, cubes of cheese, eggs (usually fried and cut into pieces), oatmeal, yogurt, bread, rice. We offer meat, but so far she isn't into it.
That sounds like a diet! LOL
Yes, we all eat a diet, and this doesn't seem like a terrible one.
I only say this b/c I have an underweight DD and these foods are not really weight gainers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine is 19m and her major foods are fruits and veg (broccoli, blueberries, bananas and avocado are favorites), any kind of cooked beans, cubes of tofu, cubes of cheese, eggs (usually fried and cut into pieces), oatmeal, yogurt, bread, rice. We offer meat, but so far she isn't into it.
That sounds like a diet! LOL
Yes, we all eat a diet, and this doesn't seem like a terrible one.
I only say this b/c I have an underweight DD and these foods are not really weight gainers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine is 19m and her major foods are fruits and veg (broccoli, blueberries, bananas and avocado are favorites), any kind of cooked beans, cubes of tofu, cubes of cheese, eggs (usually fried and cut into pieces), oatmeal, yogurt, bread, rice. We offer meat, but so far she isn't into it.
That sounds like a diet! LOL
Yes, we all eat a diet, and this doesn't seem like a terrible one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, I feed my kids minimally processed foods. I work full time, so there is no way I could make everything. DD eats cut up fruit, oatmeal, yogurt and bananas for breakfast. For lunch she gets REAL chicken breast nuggets from whole oohs (they are prepackaged but minimally processed) They are actually real meat and not all compressed looking. I give her organic pasta (from a box) with homemade cheese sauce (butter, cream and cheese) with cooked broccoli. I give her a lot of frozen organic veggies cooked. I give her scrambled eggs with toast, etc.
I consider these foods to be minimally processed yet convenient.
Given that you don't seem to want to feed your child compressed meat, why don't you just cook up a bunch of chicken breasts and throw them in the freezer. Takes about 10 minutes once every few weeks, and then they are always available.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine is 19m and her major foods are fruits and veg (broccoli, blueberries, bananas and avocado are favorites), any kind of cooked beans, cubes of tofu, cubes of cheese, eggs (usually fried and cut into pieces), oatmeal, yogurt, bread, rice. We offer meat, but so far she isn't into it.
That sounds like a diet! LOL
Anonymous wrote:I'm the PP who uses Panko - I like them b/c they give a better crunch. As for seasonings I mainly use a not real spicy mexican blend. Once they are baked and cooled, they are ready to freeze nicely. You may want to invest in a food saver system (the ones that suck the air out) to keep out freezer burn (which is where you'd get the soggy mess), although once you bake to reheat it shouldn't be soggy...
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, I feed my kids minimally processed foods. I work full time, so there is no way I could make everything. DD eats cut up fruit, oatmeal, yogurt and bananas for breakfast. For lunch she gets REAL chicken breast nuggets from whole oohs (they are prepackaged but minimally processed) They are actually real meat and not all compressed looking. I give her organic pasta (from a box) with homemade cheese sauce (butter, cream and cheese) with cooked broccoli. I give her a lot of frozen organic veggies cooked. I give her scrambled eggs with toast, etc.
I consider these foods to be minimally processed yet convenient.