Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: What are your dinner is typically like? Sometimes different foods will fill you up temporarily but then leave you feeling hungry 2 or 3 hours later. Chinese food is notorious for doing this and so is pasta unless you go whole grain noodles.
We are big fans of skinny pop (Costco is your friend for this and other snacks foods), soft pretzels, whole milk, watermelon, nuts as pos dinner snacks.
Also, are you sure he'snot confusing thirst with hunger?
OMG, this is hilarious!
The watermelon and skinny pop are silly.
Skinny pop is cheap at Costco and its perfect for grazing and eating it by the handfuls so it fills you up, but you don't feel gross. Love it as do my kids.
Watermelon is fine. Another good filler and hydrater. I'd think bananas are cheaper, fill you up more and not as messy.
OP asked for cheap and easy ways to fill her bottomless kids. Above suggestions are fine as well as other Pps suggesting microwavable taquitos, hot pockets, bagel bites, etc
Ymmv.
A soft pretzel can have almost 400 calories, so it is a decent suggestion, and nuts as a snack are high nutrient dense source of calories.
Anonymous wrote:I have three boys ranging in age from 6 to 17. I found that when the two oldest wanted a post-dinner snack, they craved (and I refused) junk. I found that if I let them have junk for a post-dinner snack, they were grumpy the next morning until after breakfast. Instead, we fought a lot at first and finally compromised on fat-heavy (rather than carb heavy) post-dinner snacks that they could prepare themselves. They eat/ate a lot of guacamole, hummus, nuts, salami, and cheese. They usually combine it with a glass of milk. The oldest will now frequently down half a dozen hard boiled eggs before bed and seems happy. The middle son still struggles to make peace with the options of offer and seems to mostly really want someone to prepare something for him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: What are your dinner is typically like? Sometimes different foods will fill you up temporarily but then leave you feeling hungry 2 or 3 hours later. Chinese food is notorious for doing this and so is pasta unless you go whole grain noodles.
We are big fans of skinny pop (Costco is your friend for this and other snacks foods), soft pretzels, whole milk, watermelon, nuts as pos dinner snacks.
Also, are you sure he'snot confusing thirst with hunger?
OMG, this is hilarious!
Anonymous wrote:In addition to what 23:46 posted, we’ve purchased stock in Cheerios.
—mother of a 17 year old son with 2% body fat and who I’m convinced has a hollow leg because I can’t figure out where it all goes
Anonymous wrote: What are your dinner is typically like? Sometimes different foods will fill you up temporarily but then leave you feeling hungry 2 or 3 hours later. Chinese food is notorious for doing this and so is pasta unless you go whole grain noodles.
We are big fans of skinny pop (Costco is your friend for this and other snacks foods), soft pretzels, whole milk, watermelon, nuts as pos dinner snacks.
Also, are you sure he'snot confusing thirst with hunger?
Anonymous wrote:Okay.
The dcum moms of preschool girls are going to jump in soon with their carrots, kale chips and organic water drawn from mountain springs, but here goes:
Hot pockets
Carnation instant breakfast
Hard boiled eggs (cooked one dozen at a time and replenished maybe every few days to a week
Breakfast burritos, made ahead, wrapped in foil and reheated as needed
Popcorn (we prefer the real kind made in a pan but microwave is fine)
Coldcuts/sandwich
Costco mini tacos
And
Cereal with milk. Frosted flakes were my siblings go to pre bedtime meal after a day of running followed by dance lessons and soccer practice.