Ideas about Dinner
AlwaysLearning list Feburary 2006
QUESTION:
How do you all handle that hour or so before dinner, when not only
does a meal need to be prepared, but babies need to be nursed and
older children need attention? In our house the wicked mix of
hungery, tired, and frazzled doesn't transition well into a very
peaceful mealtime.
Thanks in advance for your time tested advice.
Cathy
ANSWERS:
Barb wrote:
I make things that can be made a head of time and just thrown in at dinner time.
Crock pot stuff, spinach or broccoli pie, mix up batter for whatever so it's minimal work.
Also, that is a great time of day for water or sand play for my kids. Mellows everyone out.
julie S. / jnjstau wrote:
I personally love anything made in a crockpot and having a veggie tray available
Jane / Tribecus wrote:There are four small people in our home ranging from 8 years to 21 months. I've found that if I feed them first (usually via requests for a specific food or a "big, giant food plate"), then nurse the smallest, I'm able to focus on meal prep for dh & I while they enjoy their food and the beginning of their shows, or they play, run laps through the kitchen, dining room, living room, or whatever.
I really enjoy cooking the evening meal and frequently have "help" as well!! Sous chefs, even!! As illogical as it sounds, I can't seem to get dinner on the table any earlier than 6:30, no matter when I start. If something's in the crockpot, it's somehow ready to serve at 6:30, if I prepare something, no matter how complicated, it's 6:30, if we order pizza 6:30. For a while I tried to fight it, but at least I'm consistent!! If you're in MD, dinner's at 6:30! 🙂
Hope that helps!!
Nancy B./CelticFrau wrote:
3rd vote here for Crockpots! You can put the stuff in when everyone's still
asleep, or when you get a moment when they're playing, and not even have to
think about it till dishing out the plates!
Also, if your family doesn't mind leftovers, always prepare enough for 2
days. Takes same amount of time, but gives you every other day "off" from
cooking. We do this a lot with stuff like spaghetti, soup, beans and
chili,...really anything!
Melissa [Mom to Josh (11), Breanna (8), Emily (7), Rachel (6), Sam (4), Dan
(2), and Avari Rose] wrote:
We do a lot of crockpot stuff too...I usually start after everyone
has eaten lunch and is satiated for the time being. In a half hour, I
can usually do breakfast dishes, lunch dishes and chop up some stuff
for dinner.
Also, if you can take two hours on a weekend or something, you can
prepare a lot of meat or veggies or both (if you're an omnivore like
us!) put it in ziplock baggies with dates on it. That way you have it
prepared to just throw in. I can cook five pounds of scrambled beef,
two pounds of chicken breasts and a roast, and chop it up, divide it
into 1lb bags and have all the food we'd possibly want for a week.
Same for veggies, chop up a few onions, peppers, and just have it
divided into the snack size ziplocks.
Like Nancy said, prepare for leftovers! We like to have 'redo'
nights. So if we have spaghetti on Monday, we'll use the leftover
sauce to make pizza on Tuesday, maybe some baked rigatoni. Whatever.
Taco meat can turn into shepherd's pie or mexican casserole.
Terri wrote:
I like to have a snack tray for my kids in the afternoon. I put out
my kids favorite things like graham crackers, club crackers, cheese,
marshmallows, nuts, fruit, sliced meat, popcorn; whatever they'd like.
They usually munch on this while watching a show they want to see.
Many times, I use this time to fix dinner. Then I just have to heat
it up a little later, but everyone has had a snack and rest so we're
ok.
Sometimes I cook dinner in the morning right after breakfast. It
seems to be a good time for everyone around here. I like to have a
variety in the frig and when my kids were younger, this seemed the
only way to do that. Then I can help them through the rougher
afternoon times.
I also brown large amounts of ground beef and then seperate it into
freezer bags and freeze it. It's fine when you are adding it to
casseroles and stuff with sauces. I also do that when I boil a
chicken. I'll boil two and freeze the extra meat. That helps a lot.
I agree, I like the crock pot and fixin' double of everything. I
might fix double of everything several days in a row and then everyone
can pick their favorites.
It helps keep tension and frustration down to know when my kids need a
rest and food. Mine need to eat regularly, so I just stop and fix a
snack tray and take it to them where they are playing or watching a
show. It helps us get through the day if I don't wait until they are
at there explosion level and then try to fix something. I try to stay
ahead of that.
Meg Walker wrote:
We seem to go through phases where we need to change the time we eat
dinner. For a while, everyone was so hungry and so desperate to snack
around 4pm (including me!) that I just started having dinner ready at
4. The kids and I would eat, and then they'd go off quite happily
full and content and play.
I'd re-heat it for dh when he got home, and sit and chat with him
(and a cup of tea) while he ate.
The kids might need a small snack later in the evening, but it was
never with the desperation of the afternoon craving.
Angela / game-enthusiast wrote:
One thing I've done since having kids is to lose the expectation to have
dinner on the table at a certain time or even with us all eating together.
When I first read those studies about families that eat together I didn't
think it through and I thought it was important to eat together and I
stressed myself out with those expectations. But what is really important
is to spend time with your family each day, listening to them and hanging
out with them. It doesn't matter if it is at dinner time or not. When I
let go of that expectation our lives became much more peaceful.
I keep a bunch of cooked pasta and rice in the fridge. You can pull out a
quick meal for a hungry kid and not feel like you have to do a lot of work.
Add some sauce to the spaghetti or cheddar cheese and milk to the macaroni
and throw it in the microwave. Just re-heat the rice with butter or
sometimes I throw a frozen vegetable in the microwave and my kids are happy.
Of course there is most always fruit or raw veggies to hold us over if I did
make a meal and the kids are hungry before it is ready.
I still cook meals several times a week and most often the kids sit and eat
with me (or us if dh is home). I just don't let the expectation to eat
together stress me out. If someone is hungry, I help them find something
they can eat that doesn't take too long to prepare.
Sandra Dodd wrote:
I always put the kids' needs ahead of dinner. Dinner happened after
or around nursing babies and such.
You might have to do away with the idea of a peaceful mealtime for a
few years. Maybe re-thinking meals would be the way to go.
I think it helps rather than to live by the idealized traditional
model of dinner at 6:00, all at their seats, dinner conversation that
could be reported to the media as an ideal mix of news of the day and
philosophy, etc, to think of food and its purpose. People need to be
nourished physically and it's uncomfortable to go to sleep hungry.
THAT is the purpose of evening food, not the appearance of a well-organized dinner.
Historically, until pretty recently the only families in the English-
speaking-world-in-general that had that dream dinner were those with
servants to cook and set the table. All the family had to do was
show up and eat. Poorer families tended to have soup or stew that
had cooked all day and eat it out of bowls. Crock pot food, and
probably NOT meat.
Servants became scarce during and after the first world war and the
great depression but the expectation that families would still
maintain those appearances and schedules continued, or some families
tried to use their children as servants. Most mothers just tried to
do all the cooking and ironing that they used to have done by maids,
when the families couldn't afford to pay someone at least to come in
and do laundry and ironing.
Also it's not uncommon (historically) for children to eat first, and
separately, and food kids like, and then for the adults and teens and
guests to eat a little later, at leisure, and not have to worry about
whether their food is something the kids would like.
I have more energy in the morning but I don't always want to use it
thinking about dinner. When I do, I do better.
🙂
If I start bread
and put something out to thaw, or better yet mix up a casserole or
put something in the crock pot—at least a sauce or something easy
like ground beef or chicken in barbecue sauce—then dinner is easy and
if plans change, the thing that was started earlier can go in the
fridge.
Also, because Keith takes lunch to work, we make large amounts and
put the planned-for leftovers into individual portions in those
reuseable yet eventually disposable Zip-Loc plastic containers. They
can be fridged or frozen.
We've never made our kids wait for dinner. If they're hungry, they
can snack.
There might be ideas here that would be comforting:
sandradodd.com/food
Try to ease guilt and expectation and pressure. Those don't help the
family unit.
Joyce Fetteroll's recommendations on dinner include this:If your goal is bodies present at the dinner table then the way you go about it will be different than if your goal is the family happy at the dinner table.
If having all bodies present is the goal, then some acceptable tools to achieve that are to make presence a requirement and to make sure they're very hungry when dinner is ready.
If having them happy is the goal, then those techniques won't work as well.
and there is more here
more on food and other parenting considerations
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