Anonymous wrote:OP, your kids will be fine. I was the pickiest eater ever until about age 10...and now I eat pretty much any cuisine.
This is a wake up call, though, to expand your cooking repertoire and keep a broader variety of ingredients on-hand once we resume something closer to normal life. I'm Asian-American, so my spice cabinet is more varied than average, I'm guessing...but I tend to have the spices available for a pretty broad variety of cuisines. I generally avoid more complicated dishes of cuisines I'm less familiar with, but I try to mimic the spice profiles. It's an easy way to create variety without needing a lot of exotic ingredients.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FIRST
WORLD
PROBLEM
IS
A
PROBLEM
NONETHELESS
It’s not a problem though. If your kids stop being so adventurous with their food, is it really a problem? They’ll just be like the majority of kids.
I'd prefer my kids not regress to have the palate of the majority of kids, so yes it is a problem.
It is better for them for health and other reasons to remain willing to eat a wide variety of foods. It is better for me if they do it as well because it would enable me to continue to go to interesting restaurants.
Is this the biggest problem facing the world today? Of course not, and I never said or implied it was. In fact, my OP was very clear that it was not the biggest problem that I personally was facing. But it is a problem nonetheless and one that DCUM might actually have some useful thoughts about. I would not say the same about my bigger problems so I didn't post about them.
You don’t have to make PBJs and grilled cheese, you’re just choosing to. Buy the ingredients and spices to make foreign foods and learn how to cook them as as a family. This is not insurmountable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FIRST
WORLD
PROBLEM
IS
A
PROBLEM
NONETHELESS
It’s not a problem though. If your kids stop being so adventurous with their food, is it really a problem? They’ll just be like the majority of kids.
I'd prefer my kids not regress to have the palate of the majority of kids, so yes it is a problem.
It is better for them for health and other reasons to remain willing to eat a wide variety of foods. It is better for me if they do it as well because it would enable me to continue to go to interesting restaurants.
Is this the biggest problem facing the world today? Of course not, and I never said or implied it was. In fact, my OP was very clear that it was not the biggest problem that I personally was facing. But it is a problem nonetheless and one that DCUM might actually have some useful thoughts about. I would not say the same about my bigger problems so I didn't post about them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FIRST
WORLD
PROBLEM
IS
A
PROBLEM
NONETHELESS
It’s not a problem though. If your kids stop being so adventurous with their food, is it really a problem? They’ll just be like the majority of kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids, 5 and 7, will try almost anything and usually wind up liking most things. We've gotten lucky, but we have also worked very hard to try to expose them to all sorts of cuisines and flavors.
We have some variety in what we eat at home, but a lot of their exposure has come from taking them to restaurants serving all sorts of different cuisines. (This variety is one of my favorite things about this area.)
I'm trying to expand my cooking repertiore, but there are some things I doubt I can make well and, even if I wanted to try, I've had trouble finding ingredients for a lot of things I would want to make.
We've been doing a ton more PBJ, grilled cheese, mac and cheese, etc. than we normally would -- although we eat all of those occasionally even during normal times.
I worry that if we go too long where they are away from more interesting food they will lose their interest in it. This is partly a vent, but I am also looking to see if people have any suggestions. (Because we have some family members at higher risk, we aren't doing take out right now, which of course would be one way to do it.)
People are dying. This is a pandemic and the U S is the epicenter of the pandemic. There could easily be MILLIONS of death
Whether your will continue to be adventurous eaters isnotveven a concern.
Oh, DCUM I love thee.
I must have missed in my post where I said that trucks delivering ventilators should be diverted so that I could get delivery of soon du bu paste. Or the NIH should stop coronavirus research and instead work towards research to develop produce with a greater shelf life.
The very fact that I am avoiding takeout and grocery shopping in the stores because I have a high risk family member means that I understand the seriousness of the current situation. That doesn't mean that relatively trivial concerns have to be dismissed outright.
And did you ever think that "worrying" about relatively trivial concerns -- especially concerns that there might be something I could do about it -- is a little bit of a diversion from the really big concerns that I have next to no ability to control?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids, 5 and 7, will try almost anything and usually wind up liking most things. We've gotten lucky, but we have also worked very hard to try to expose them to all sorts of cuisines and flavors.
We have some variety in what we eat at home, but a lot of their exposure has come from taking them to restaurants serving all sorts of different cuisines. (This variety is one of my favorite things about this area.)
I'm trying to expand my cooking repertiore, but there are some things I doubt I can make well and, even if I wanted to try, I've had trouble finding ingredients for a lot of things I would want to make.
We've been doing a ton more PBJ, grilled cheese, mac and cheese, etc. than we normally would -- although we eat all of those occasionally even during normal times.
I worry that if we go too long where they are away from more interesting food they will lose their interest in it. This is partly a vent, but I am also looking to see if people have any suggestions. (Because we have some family members at higher risk, we aren't doing take out right now, which of course would be one way to do it.)
People are dying. This is a pandemic and the U S is the epicenter of the pandemic. There could easily be MILLIONS of death
Whether your will continue to be adventurous eaters isnotveven a concern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FIRST
WORLD
PROBLEM
IS
A
PROBLEM
NONETHELESS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids, 5 and 7, will try almost anything and usually wind up liking most things. We've gotten lucky, but we have also worked very hard to try to expose them to all sorts of cuisines and flavors.
We have some variety in what we eat at home, but a lot of their exposure has come from taking them to restaurants serving all sorts of different cuisines. (This variety is one of my favorite things about this area.)
I'm trying to expand my cooking repertiore, but there are some things I doubt I can make well and, even if I wanted to try, I've had trouble finding ingredients for a lot of things I would want to make.
We've been doing a ton more PBJ, grilled cheese, mac and cheese, etc. than we normally would -- although we eat all of those occasionally even during normal times.
I worry that if we go too long where they are away from more interesting food they will lose their interest in it. This is partly a vent, but I am also looking to see if people have any suggestions. (Because we have some family members at higher risk, we aren't doing take out right now, which of course would be one way to do it.)
People are dying. This is a pandemic and the U S is the epicenter of the pandemic. There could easily be MILLIONS of death
Whether your will continue to be adventurous eaters isnotveven a concern.