Anonymous wrote:milk. DH and I now drink milk with dinner, too. As she was filling up on milk and not eating enough food, she gets a half glass (double old fashioned, so 6-8 oz?), then can have water if she is still thirsty.
In restaurants she is now (age 7) allowed to order pop (caffeine free, full sugar only). She gets V8 fusion with breakfast. Usually milk with lunch.
It is rare for us adults to drink pop at home. Fizzy water is more common.
In any case, I am trying to limit my intake too, so you are all very motivating.
Just kidding! I do try to cook (often from the Scramble cookbooks) like the rest of you. Anonymous wrote:I don't see why an adult can't have a soda with dinner. But not kids, no.
Anonymous wrote:I love how juice and soda have become as objectionable as smoking in the car with the windows closed. I wonder how far this trend can go? Next year, it's going to be about evian versus san pelligrino. "I can't believe you give your kids volvic! Don't you know how the minerals in certain waters can affect brain development??? So trashy!"
Anyhoo, OP, I also drink soda (and I'm not a teenager, PP; my parents were very strict about these things, and so now that I'm an adult I can do whatever I want! Ha!), and my kid has a choice of OJ or water. She chooses water about three-quarters of the time. It's important to give kids reasonable choices, instead of mandating every last detail of their lives.
I will say, though, that when I buy juice, it's actual juice. The stuff that comes out when you squish a fruit. Not artificially-fruit-flavored sugar water.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see why an adult can't have a soda with dinner.
That is probably because you are irredeemably vulgar.
Hyper-sweetened beverages are designed to appeal to the lowest elements. Adults drink water, or wine, or beer, or tea with their meals, not carbonated refreshments, as if they were grotesque oversized kids.
Anonymous wrote:I don't see why an adult can't have a soda with dinner.
Anonymous wrote:So OP, just out of curiosity what do you typically serve for dinner?
Anonymous wrote:I don't see why an adult can't have a soda with dinner. But not kids, no.