Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You ask her to help herself and tell her to add to your shopping list as needed.
I am sure some families do this, but not many. With a live out nanny, it is more common, at least among the families I know and nannies I have interviewed, to offer the nanny access to your drinks and snacks (fruit, yogurt, chips if you keep them around, etc.) and ask that she bring her own lunch or lunch supplies. Most nannnies leave their lunch fixings in a designated space in the fridge or mark their stuff with their initials. Once your kids are eating solids, it becomes more common to invite the nanny to eat whatever she is preparing for them, but again, that is optional and depends to some extent on whether your nanny actually prepares meals or just reheats leftovers for the child/children.
I asked around about this not too long ago, and did not find one family who invites the nanny to add to the family's shopping list. Nor did any nanny I interviewed communicate such an expectation.
This.
+2 (although my most recent PT family did ask me to add foods to their grocery list, I have never taken them up on the offer because it is so unusual in my experience)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You ask her to help herself and tell her to add to your shopping list as needed.
I am sure some families do this, but not many. With a live out nanny, it is more common, at least among the families I know and nannies I have interviewed, to offer the nanny access to your drinks and snacks (fruit, yogurt, chips if you keep them around, etc.) and ask that she bring her own lunch or lunch supplies. Most nannnies leave their lunch fixings in a designated space in the fridge or mark their stuff with their initials. Once your kids are eating solids, it becomes more common to invite the nanny to eat whatever she is preparing for them, but again, that is optional and depends to some extent on whether your nanny actually prepares meals or just reheats leftovers for the child/children.
I asked around about this not too long ago, and did not find one family who invites the nanny to add to the family's shopping list. Nor did any nanny I interviewed communicate such an expectation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You ask her to help herself and tell her to add to your shopping list as needed.
I am sure some families do this, but not many. With a live out nanny, it is more common, at least among the families I know and nannies I have interviewed, to offer the nanny access to your drinks and snacks (fruit, yogurt, chips if you keep them around, etc.) and ask that she bring her own lunch or lunch supplies. Most nannnies leave their lunch fixings in a designated space in the fridge or mark their stuff with their initials. Once your kids are eating solids, it becomes more common to invite the nanny to eat whatever she is preparing for them, but again, that is optional and depends to some extent on whether your nanny actually prepares meals or just reheats leftovers for the child/children.
I asked around about this not too long ago, and did not find one family who invites the nanny to add to the family's shopping list. Nor did any nanny I interviewed communicate such an expectation.
This.
Anonymous wrote:
You ask her to help herself and tell her to add to your shopping list as needed.
I am sure some families do this, but not many. With a live out nanny, it is more common, at least among the families I know and nannies I have interviewed, to offer the nanny access to your drinks and snacks (fruit, yogurt, chips if you keep them around, etc.) and ask that she bring her own lunch or lunch supplies. Most nannnies leave their lunch fixings in a designated space in the fridge or mark their stuff with their initials. Once your kids are eating solids, it becomes more common to invite the nanny to eat whatever she is preparing for them, but again, that is optional and depends to some extent on whether your nanny actually prepares meals or just reheats leftovers for the child/children.
I asked around about this not too long ago, and did not find one family who invites the nanny to add to the family's shopping list. Nor did any nanny I interviewed communicate such an expectation.
Anonymous wrote:You ask her to help herself and tell her to add to your shopping list as needed.