Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you say scraped the toppings off the pizza I'm assuming you made the error of ordering pizza with gross shite on top. That was your bad.
Wrong. Plain pizza. Cheese and tomato sauce.
Exactly how do you scrape off toppings if there are none? I think you are looking for problems.
Anonymous wrote:It's weird how some people have so few substantive issues in their lives that they post about what their kids friends eat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you say scraped the toppings off the pizza I'm assuming you made the error of ordering pizza with gross shite on top. That was your bad.
Wrong. Plain pizza. Cheese and tomato sauce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you say scraped the toppings off the pizza I'm assuming you made the error of ordering pizza with gross shite on top. That was your bad.
Wrong. Plain pizza. Cheese and tomato sauce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You want the real answer? It’s because American parents coddle their children from birth and let them get away with this ridiculous behavior on the basis that they are “picky” eaters. And unfortunately those children grow into adults with extremely limited palates. That’s one of the main reasons the dining options is this country are so atrocious, generally speaking, and you have to go to a fine dining restauarant for a decent meal.
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What a giant pile of drivel this is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not ask the kids what they will eat before making it?
Oh, well, gee I don't know... maybe because some adults don't believe in catering to kids like we're their servants?
Anonymous wrote:You want the real answer? It’s because American parents coddle their children from birth and let them get away with this ridiculous behavior on the basis that they are “picky” eaters. And unfortunately those children grow into adults with extremely limited palates. That’s one of the main reasons the dining options is this country are so atrocious, generally speaking, and you have to go to a fine dining restauarant for a decent meal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From your complaint, it’s Damned if you do, damned if you don’t. Kid won’t eat your “fancy” meals and you complain. Kid won’t eat crappy kid food and you complain.
Honestly I think you’re being too sensitive. Kids comment. Who cares? Put out a few things and if they’re hungry they’ll find something. If not, oh well.
I guess my expectation is that kids won't complain when served food at the house of someone they barely know. Basic manners, y'know?
Really?? Manners and ‘y’know’ do not go together.
Neither of you should be near children. Y’know?
Anonymous wrote:One of my biggest pet peeves is kids who come to our house and refuse to eat anything we serve. When we first moved here from Europe, we would serve our kids' friends (ranging in age from 8 to 12) whatever we were eating - pasta bolognese, roasted chicken and potatoes with herbs, salad. We soon realized that our kids friends' -- at least the ones who'd grown up in the US -- wouldn't touch any of it. So we started simplifying their meals, only serving plain pasta, hamburgers, pizza, hot dogs. That works most of the time. (Well, except for the kid who scrapes all the toppings off a plain pizza and cuts off the crust, in the end only eating 40% of each slice and throwing the rest away.) [b]Anyway... today we had some more kids over [i]and I made hot dogs and oven french fries. Sure winner, right? Nope. One of the kids, upon seeing the food, immediately declares: I don't like french fries. The only french fries I like are the home made ones.
Please, can someone unroll my eyes out of the back of my head?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From your complaint, it’s Damned if you do, damned if you don’t. Kid won’t eat your “fancy” meals and you complain. Kid won’t eat crappy kid food and you complain.
Honestly I think you’re being too sensitive. Kids comment. Who cares? Put out a few things and if they’re hungry they’ll find something. If not, oh well.
I guess my expectation is that kids won't complain when served food at the house of someone they barely know. Basic manners, y'know?
Anonymous wrote:“Here’s what I’ve made. If you’re hungry, you’ll eat it.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not ask the kids what they will eat before making it?
I've done that. The kid who scraped the toppings off her pizza had specifically asked for pizza before coming to our house. In fact, I shelved the original dinner plan so I could accommodate her pickiness.