Nothing to do with food, just two kids and a cat |
Generally, I get the kinds organized in the mornings. Aside from peeling kiwis and french braiding hair, I also get their lunches ready. Grady's easy. Remember, grades K - 4 don't really give a rip what's in their lunch. Food is just something that gets in the way before they can run out to the playground. As a gluten-free kid, Grady's surprisingly easy. I just toss some deli meat, cheese, fruit, and chips into his lunch box, and BAM! Done.
Dylan in her happy place. |
Here's a good example. Today's lunch included shredded sirloin over couscous with a chimichurri sauce. If I made up a pu pu platter her lunch would have included all three of the most fun-to-say foods. Some days she'll get onigiri, others she'll have wild game over rice, and when it's chilly, she'll get hot pumpkin curry soup. It's like a little Blue Apron meal order kit, but for kids. Regina does most of the heavy-lifting in getting the meals prepared; I just toss leftovers into a Tupperware and call myself chef. I know my mom could have whipped up pretty similar lunches (although we didn't eat much wild game, and couscous was twenty years away from Scott Valley), which makes me wonder, why in the hell did I choose to eat onion sandwiches every single day? Who was I so mad at?
I like that our kids will, at least, try any new food and they like just about everything. Puddings give Grady the jeebies, and Dylan insists she doesn't like onions (despite the copious amounts in the chimichurri I put in her lunch). At least I'm off the hook for making those boring sandwiches. As long as I can put together leftovers in some sort of favorable combination, I'll be fine. If I can't, we always have cookies.
1 comment:
Please tell me you wear a hairnet while preparing lunches.
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