Anonymous wrote:i've never understood why some parents think lunch is a time when you should be cooking a full meal. a sandwich or leftovers is fine. i used to work for a family who insisted that i cook a protein, a grain, and a vegetable for their kids (an infant and a toddler). frequently this meant making salmon or flounder or whatever. this always went in the trash-who wants that kind of thing at lunch? it would turn into an argument-the kids would want cheese and crackers and some fruit or something. they ate whatever the adults ate at dinner. you're gaining nothing by over complicating this.
To each his own. We have a lovely Easter European nanny and she makes toddler dd a full meal for lunch with similar things as most people have for dinner. It’s her biggest meal of the day since she’s hungry after a long walk and limited morning snacks. I do some prep and there are dinner leftovers available for lunch too.
General menu: lightly fried or baked fish, roasted chicken, turkey/lamb meatballs, veggie or chicken soup (as a starter) , crudités, avocado, toast/crackers with the soup and a cut up fruit or baked apple. Dd eats very well, loves her vegetables and soup and a plus is I don’t have to worry about how she eats at dinner since she ate well at lunch. We do the same thing on weekends and do a sit down lunch at home or out. Just the way we are and how I grew up and I interviewed nannies with this in mind. THe one we have now is amazing and cooks a lot of these things from scratch herself without prompting and now since dd is over 2 she is involved in meal prep.