Anonymous wrote:We need a 'zombie thread' disclaimer when people resurrect a 5-year-old thread. OP's kids probably don't even live at home anymore.
Anonymous wrote:We need a 'zombie thread' disclaimer when people resurrect a 5-year-old thread. OP's kids probably don't even live at home anymore.
Anonymous wrote:My friend with teenage boys cooked a turkey last weekend to make sure there was enough food. That seems like a good idea.
Anonymous wrote:Oh dear God. Please. No. Let this thread die.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again
My eldest sons play soccer and ice hockey 3x a week. Anytime I try to give them a soup for dinner they freak out and basically refuse to eat it. Last week I made 10 chicken legs for dinner. Every last one was eaten in about 25 mins. When I feed them till they are full, it's like preparing a meal for an army. They managed to eat 10 potatoes worth of mashed potatoes the other day. I cooked a rack of ribs and they were still hungry after.
You have 4 kids (at least) including 2 teenage boy athletes plus you and your DH and you only made 10 chicken legs? You're not making enough food. My 7 year old (who weighs 50 lbs) can eat 2-3 chicken legs.
Wow I agree. Me DH and my 4 year old can eat 10 drumsticks and 10 potatoes. You aren't making enough food. I'd say 4 drumsticks a person plus 2 large baking size potatoes per boy plus another side plus salad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again
My eldest sons play soccer and ice hockey 3x a week. Anytime I try to give them a soup for dinner they freak out and basically refuse to eat it. Last week I made 10 chicken legs for dinner. Every last one was eaten in about 25 mins. When I feed them till they are full, it's like preparing a meal for an army. They managed to eat 10 potatoes worth of mashed potatoes the other day. I cooked a rack of ribs and they were still hungry after.
You have 4 kids (at least) including 2 teenage boy athletes plus you and your DH and you only made 10 chicken legs? You're not making enough food. My 7 year old (who weighs 50 lbs) can eat 2-3 chicken legs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again
My eldest sons play soccer and ice hockey 3x a week. Anytime I try to give them a soup for dinner they freak out and basically refuse to eat it. Last week I made 10 chicken legs for dinner. Every last one was eaten in about 25 mins. When I feed them till they are full, it's like preparing a meal for an army. They managed to eat 10 potatoes worth of mashed potatoes the other day. I cooked a rack of ribs and they were still hungry after.
You have 4 kids (at least) including 2 teenage boy athletes plus you and your DH and you only made 10 chicken legs? You're not making enough food. My 7 year old (who weighs 50 lbs) can eat 2-3 chicken legs.
Anonymous wrote:Op again
My eldest sons play soccer and ice hockey 3x a week. Anytime I try to give them a soup for dinner they freak out and basically refuse to eat it. Last week I made 10 chicken legs for dinner. Every last one was eaten in about 25 mins. When I feed them till they are full, it's like preparing a meal for an army. They managed to eat 10 potatoes worth of mashed potatoes the other day. I cooked a rack of ribs and they were still hungry after.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello,
Op here!
Things have been going well. Everyone is well fed. We actually have one of my son's friends staying with us for the week so I have been making extra food. Usually I'm really concerned about waste but everything is getting gobbled up.
That's awesome op! I thought of this thread just recently. My mom visited us and she's the opposite. She cooks too much. I had to get rid of excess food![]()