jennyf917
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2006
- Messages
- 102
Oh, don't get me started on school lunches! Mercy, I could go on and on...and my son's school is less than a mile from two large CSA-type farms and within 5 miles of three large farm markets. And yet....lunch is nuggetized, fried, battered, whatever into total unrecognizability.
For his lunch, I'm planning on bento-style things. The school is a nut-free environment and I'm not interesting in buying lots of lunchmeat so there will likely be minimal sandwiches though the year. But things like fresh veggies and hummus for dipping are on the menu, along with apple slices, homemade biscuits and jam, soup in a thermos, stirfried veggies and either noodles or rice (don't need to be kept hot, but should still be warm at lunchtime), rice balls (sticky rice molded in the palm or in a special mold - I've seen stars and all kind of shapes - sometimes with meat or other filling inside) and soy sauce for dipping.
Lots of great lunch ideas at veganlunchbox.com (even if you're not vegan) and cookingcute.com - check 'em out!
Thanks for the great ideas! His school is not nut-free, but I definitely don't want him eating only pb&j all year long! He loves salami and swiss cheese, but won't eat them on a sandwich, so next week I may send them, just bread-free. He's allergic to milk, but if it is processed or cooked he can eat it. He can't do yogurt for some reason, it gives him nosebleeds, so that is out. I thought about just sending him fruit and veggies, since those are really his favorite. On top of the school lunches being nutrirional disasters, half of the stuff he won't eat. He will not touch a potato, he doesn't really like meat very much, and he prefers raw vegetables to cooked. Also, the only drink option is milk.
We are also on a budget, but I have learned how to shop for produce and healthy foods on sale and at farmers' markets. Usually everything is more expensive at Whole Foods, but their soy milk in individual sizes is much less expensive than other places, and a lot of times they have organic produce on sale for cheaper than traditional grocery stores, with the exception of celery and baby carrots at Meijer. I refuse to buy produce from Kroger--it seems like every time I do in a pinch I bring home fruit flies--eww!