The Trading Game
By PJ Goetz
www.tampawithkids.com
“How was your day at school?” I ask my nine-year old son as he got in the car.
“Great!” He exclaimed
“Really? What happened?” I asked hopefully
“Mom you are not going to believed this! At lunch I traded a juice box and a yogurt for 2 Oreo cookies! Can you believe that I got Oreos for a juice box! I am telling you mom the market is just crazy these days!” ”
“Wow” was all I could think to say
True story! My kid said that to me just last week. I had always taken a lot of pride in what I packed their lunch. I had this silly notion that when they opened up their lunches they would feel my love and happily eat the well-balanced meal I had so thoughtfully prepared. Wake up girley! Those kids are trading away everything you put in their lunches. They don’t give a hoot about nutrition they want OREOS! And so I began a quest: To get my kids to stop trading and start eating what’s in their lunch. I am not sure it can be done. I am ready to accept that it will take work on my part to get my kids eating better at lunch and I am ready to start. I am hoping by educating my kids on how to eat healthy instead of just giving them healthy foods they will begin to make better choices about the food they eat. Here is what is working for us so far! .
Make it theirs
I learned long ago the best way to kids to do anything is to make them think it was their idea. Show them some recipes and let them pick what they want. I typed up some different acceptable main ideas (see below) and then let them pick two for the week. I have even gone so far as to let them have their own shopping cart and shop for their lunch stuff while I do the weekly grocery shopping. They love being in charge of making their own lunches. Here are my guidelines: (Modify these rules to fit your family-i.e. I like my kids to have fresh fruit at lunch maybe you’d prefer yours have veggies)
My rules for lunch:
· Must have a main meal (protein & whole grain) from approved list
Think out side the box. It does not have to be a sandwich. Pasta with meatballs in a tomato sauce or a handful of mixed nuts and some whole grain crackers as long as they are getting some type of protein and a whole grain they eat whatever they like. See the list of main meal ideas below. .
· Must have some type of fresh fruit – (fruit rolls ups do not count!)
Let them cruse the fruit department. Kiwi or Grapples (apples infused with grape juice) the choice is theirs. You’ll be amazed at how adventuress they can be when it is left up to them to decide.
· May have snack item from approve list
No chips allowed. Pretzels, dried fruit and nuts is a great mix they can make themselves. We have been having fun making our own Chex Mix.
· May have one dessert.
I tell them they can have anything they want as long as they keep the calorie count to 150 or less. My boys have been having great fun hunting through the grocery store picking out dessert. We have discovered that 23 candy corns have 150 calories or 3 reduced fat Oreos have 150 calories. I was surprised that one chocolate doughnut has 250. I don’t have to say no anymore.
It’s all in the presentation.
I buy clearance items from parties stores and try to make it fun. Shop dollar stores, restaurant supply outlets and oriental grocery stores. Get creative. Let them decorate the containers anyway they want. Girls love this. Even if your kids eat PB&J everyday it can still look great.
Invest in a good thermos for hot food. I have been through a dozen cheap ones and have learned that a $20.00 thermos is a much better investment. Having the ability to bring hot food to school for lunch really opens up their choices.
Look at the week not just today
Don’t freak out if every meal is not exactly well balanced. Look at what your kids are eating over the course of the week. We would all drive ourselves nuts trying to make every meal pyramid perfect. If they had too much junk food on Monday encourage them to maybe skip the desert on Tuesday. The goal is education not perfect eating everyday of the week.
Food for thought
· Buy breads, wraps or crackers with at least 2 grams of fiber per slice.
- Try turkey, chicken or low fat bologna with less than 5 grams of fat per once.
- Children under 12 need about 50 grams of fat a day and a teen would need 75 to 80 grams. A bologna sandwich (two slices), a bag of chips and a couple cookies is about 70 grams of fat. ** Source: Julie Miller, Mercy Hospital in Cadillac Michigan, registered dietician
- Nuts and string cheese are other good sources of protein. Make snack mix with cereals like Chex, Cheerios, nuts, dried fruits. It is low in fat and has staying power.
- Flavored water and Crystal Light are good and not loaded with sugar.
Main Meal List
Print off this list and let the kids choose which one they want for the week. I let mine circle two. They make a shopping list based on their choices. I kept the recipes really simple so most all kids can make these meals themselves. Check out www.tampawithkids.com for new main meal ideas every week.
Turkey Boats
Turkey Low Fat
Low fat cheese
Multi-Grain Hot Dog Bun
Low fat mayo (optional)
Roll Turkey and Cheese together and place in a hot dog bun.
Chicken Salad Pita
Chopped Cooked Chicken
Low Fat Mayo
Chopped Celery
Grapes (optional)
Raisins (optional)
Salt & Pepper
Lettuce & Tomato
Multi Grain Pita Pocket Bread
Mix first six ingredients together line the pita pocket with lettuce and tomato and stuff with chicken salad.
Sushi Rolls
Turkey – Thin Sliced
Cream cheese
Shelled Sunflower seeds
Whole wheat wrap
BBQ Sauce or Catalina Dressing
Chop Sticks
Spread Cream Cheese on wrap and sprinkle with sunflower seeds. Cover sunflower seeds with thin sliced turkey. Roll wrap tightly. Cut into 2 inch pieces. Use chop stick to dip into BBQ sauce or Catalina dressing.
Tortilla Triangles
Whole Wheat Flour Tortillas
Cream Cheese
Canned Refired Beans
Cooked Chicken Chopped
Salsa
Spread the half of a tortilla with cream cheese , spread the other half with beans, sprinkle with the chopped chicken, drizzle with salsa. Fold each tortilla into triangles.
Ham & Cheese Wheels
4 slices of whole wheat bread
mayo
ham
low fat cheese
trim crust from bread – use a rolling pin to flatten bread slices, spread with mayo and top with meat and cheese – roll up tightly – cut each roll into 4 pin wheels secure with tooth picks
Italian Sausage Bites
Boca Meatless Sausage
14 oz jar of pizza sauce
1 cup halfed fresh mushrooms
Cut frozen Boca Meatless Sausage into ½ inch slices – add one 14 oz jar of pizza sauce and I cup of halfed fresh mushrooms – heat to simmer then cook 5 minutes. Put into thermos to stay warm until lunch.
Hummus with Crackers
Favorite kind of hummus
Chopped cucumber
Chopped Tomato
Crumbled Feta Cheese
Pita bread
Mix the first 4 ingredients together and serve with pita bread – don’t forget to take a plastic knife to school for spreading.
Peanut Butter and Jelly Cut outs on Whole Wheat.
Use favorite cookie cutters to make fun shapes.
Recipes from the show:
Morgan Zwirn, Age 10
Thermos Ready Smoothie
1 cup Frozen Strawberries
½ banana
½ cup apple juice
¼ cup silken tofu
Sam Goetz, Age 9
Sushi Roll
1 whole grain tortilla
2 Tbsp light cream cheese
3 slices smoked turkey
BBQ Sauce
Chopsticks
Spread cream cheese on tortilla top with smoked turkey. Roll tightly and then slice into 1 inch “sushi rolls” serve with BBQ sauce and chopsticks
Jake Goetz
Chicken and Rice Soup
5 Carrots, sliced
2 stalk of celery, sliced
I can of cream of chicken Soup
The Meat from one roast chicken
1 Package Uncle Ben's Wild & Long Grain Rice
8 cups of Chicken Stock or Broth
Add everything to the Crock Pot- including the seasoning packet that is in the box of rice. Stir and then cover. Cook over night on low heat and then pack in the thermos for lunch.
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