Let's me play the devil's advocate here. Let's assume you had the 2 slices of bacon, the 2 eggs scrambled without any added fat, and a regular english muffin, dry... that would be the smallest portion of the breakfast you mentioned.
2 large eggs = 150 calories
2 thin slices bacon = 80 calories
2 oz english muffin = 140 calories
Not bad at 370 calories.... but that is assuming everything dry (no butter, no margarine, no jam) and assuming the smallest of the portions you mentioned, and no drink (no coffee with cream/sugar, no juice, no milk).
2 eggs and an english muffin is usually standard for breakfast. Bacon is a treat, and only 2 slices every once in a while. I don't drink milk, just OJ, and he'll either drink OJ or water. And I don't use any butter on anything for breakfast. He's actually not a fan of most common seasoning like butter, salt, or pepper.
For dinner meats, 4 oz might be okay, depending on what kind of meat it is. I would probably never serve a 6 oz serving of meat, unless it was fish.
Like when I buy a package of ground beef, I usually try to get it between 1-1.25lbs and then divide it into 4 and only use one section for cooking. Unless I'm making extra for left overs. Like the pork chops, I buy the package of 10 slices, so it's only a few ounces per piece. I try to buy the larger packages with the smaller pieces and then divide before freezing so I don't over cook.
You mentioned before that beef brisket is one of your standard meats. A standard 3 oz portion of marbled beef brisket (the grade between the lean and the fatty), braised, is 250 calories. Put that along side a plain 7 oz baked potato (which is a large potato) at 220 calories and you are at 470 with no other sides, no butter or margarine or sour cream, no sauces/gravies, no added fat during the cooking, and no drinks (other than water).
Beef brisket isn't something I cook all the time, in fact it's something I've only cooked a few times in my life. It's just something that he likes to eat as well, that I know how to cook.
Do you see where I am going with this? I think your portions are out of whack. I think you need to do some reading and research to start discovering that healthy portions sizes should be.
I know I need to figure that sort of thing out. I'd love to talk to a nutritionist, but I think it'd be too expensive. But I have heard a fist size is usually a good estimate of a serving.
I'm laughing about the taco truck... never heard of that! We only have ice cream trucks here in New England... DS would LOVE a taco truck!
I've seen them before in Miami, just usually lunch trucks that drive around business districts selling food. But these are trucks with mini kitchens in the back end. Most of them go to the same spot all the time, and often times on the weekends you'll find them at the flea markets. There's one that makes a good quesadilla, but they're not my favorite. And a mexican taco is way different than what you'd find at a chain restaurant.
Well... I disagree with the reaction to the green beans. There have been plenty of times when I've introduced something new or unusual or unexpected to my family... and other than when my son was a toddler, I would never expect or tolerate a gagging reaction (unless there was truly a physical reason, like a food allergy). I mean, this is FOOD you are giving him, not trash or manure!!
I've had worse reactions in the past from other people. So it doesn't really bug me too much. It just gives me something to poke at him with.
The Thomas's english muffins and bagels are pretty big. You might want to start considering eating just a half.
He eats the english muffins, I usually have a slice of bread with my egg. Or a bagel with a little bit of cream cheese for my breakfast.
Even though fruit is healthy....and it isn't usually the reason we end up fat, it is still CALORIES and there are still portions that are normal. For most of the higher water fruits, like watermelon, 1 cup is considered a serving... same with strawberries and blueberries. I believe a 1/4 of a medium cantaloupe is considered a serving. Half a banana is considered a serving on Weight Watchers.
I'll try to keep this in mind. It's so easy to go way overboard.
I don't know that it is a matter of "too much fruit", but you could certainly easily eat yourself over your daily calories by eating too much fruit and it could certainly cause some gastric distress! But if you are eating the fruit in lieu of a candy bar, I say go for it! .............P
Actually it's really not in lieu of anything else, I'm not much of a candy eater. And if the snack isn't in the house, I don't eat it.