Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What seems to be the problem? Your daughter is eating a wide variety of foods.
The problem is that daughter isn’t eating what the rest of the family eats and you can’t always get breakfast foods when you eat out or travel or when you visit family. I mean eventually the kid needs to broaden her diet as just liking “breakfast” foods is weird. I mean it seems like the kid has some sort of block here related to eating but I can’t figure out what. This is a very strange group of foods to eat both texture and taste wise.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the OR who thought the beans affectation was funny. I guess I know what posters are still speaking in English accents or saying prego! twenty years later. I really hit a nerve!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm the OR who thought the beans affectation was funny. I guess I know what posters are still speaking in English accents or saying prego! twenty years later. I really hit a nerve!
You are an enormous d-bag, and you haven't explained your reasoning, if you can call it that, at all. I am not Latin American, and I have never been south of Texas - should I not consider bean a breakfast food? People opinions about food must be set in amber based on where they grew up?
Anonymous wrote:What seems to be the problem? Your daughter is eating a wide variety of foods.
Anonymous wrote:Our 4yo only eats breakfast-ish foods. She has never swallowed a bite of meat or fish in her entire life, even during baby led weaning. She is over 99% for height and 65% for weight. DD prefers to serve her "dinner foods" aka meat, starch, veggie that she will not eat and then have her go hungry until she gives in and eats it (she hasn't in the past). I prefer to just give her what she enjoys, she eats it, and we move on.
She eats a rotation/combination of:
Greek yogurt
Any fruit
Omlettes (with any veggies)
Beans and toast
Oatmeal
Veggie and sweet potato hash as long as it's served with another breakfast item
Smoothies with any fruits and veggies
Homemade banana oat flax break
Toast with anything on it- PB, almond butter, jelly, or avocado
Hard boiled eggs
Homemade pancakes of any kind- sweet potato, berry, zucchini, etc
She drinks milk, almond milk, ripple (whichever we have on hand) and water
Dh also gets annoyed that she won't eat any kid food- chicken nuggets, hot dogs, pizza, etc. I will admit that could be difficult when away from home, but we haven't taken her to a restaurant or anything since covid anyway.
Is it worth pressing her to widen her food choices or just let it be
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You consider beans a breakfast food???
It sounds fine to me. She’s eating a big variety of foods. Who cares if she doesn’t like meat and “kid food”?
Op here. I studied abroad in the UK and guess it stuck with me
Anonymous wrote:I'm the OR who thought the beans affectation was funny. I guess I know what posters are still speaking in English accents or saying prego! twenty years later. I really hit a nerve!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You consider beans a breakfast food???
It sounds fine to me. She’s eating a big variety of foods. Who cares if she doesn’t like meat and “kid food”?
Op here. I studied abroad in the UK and guess it stuck with me
Omg I'm dying. Sorry to go off topic but the idea that someone spent four months in college in London and now considers beans a breakfast food is hilarious.
A lot of Latin American countries have beans at breakfast. Just because you didn’t/don’t have it as a breakfast food doesn’t mean nobody should.