This school year is gearing up to start in a few weeks, which means I am getting my recipes in order and meal preferences straight.
My 10 year-old doesn’t like strawberries, tomatoes, pineapple, bananas, or anything squishy. A staunch vegan – doesn’t like meat at all, cheese is his weakness and will be the last thing he gives up, so he says.
The 8 year-old likes sandwiches, any food that calls for salsa, sour cream and cheese, green apples and corn on the cob. Loves meat, especially chicken – fried. (Sigh)
The 4 year-old will eat anything her brothers say is good, and anything sweet. She has an amazing palate for a Kindergarten kid; she loves Sushi, onions, leeks, orzo, salmon and spinach among other things.
Me – I love it all. All the colors and flavors, all the gross and weird looking stuff and all of the things I’ve never tried. I am determined to travel every one of the seven Continents AND to taste the food of every culture on the planet. A girl MUST dream, you know.
Packing lunch usually means dinner’s leftovers – this can be tricky because it means that dinner has to be so good, that the kids will actually want to eat it again the next day. On the days that dinner is so good that there are no leftovers, or dinner wasn’t that great of a success – I cook lunch from scratch (these are the super-quick’s).
Most of the recipes I use are not recipes at all, but cut and paste projects of web browsing, cookbook reads, what I or the kids have a taste for, what’s in season and what I can afford. A little of this, a little of that – substitutions are King. Flexibility is one of the most important ingredients in cooking for me. I use measuring spoons only when I’m baking (learned that the hard way) and when I’m trying to write a recipe. ha.
The only principle I will not compromise is the use of REAL food ingredients. It is possible to prepare a meal, a lunch, with REAL ingredients with whatever resources you have on hand. REAL = not fake. Not artificial, chemical or manufactured. Not powdered, in a kit or in a pop top, not hermetically sealed or preserved, and no colors that only occur in a lab. No food that pops or crackles as a result of scientific experimentation or engineering. I’m not a food purist, just someone who thinks that the Earth pretty much has the growing, creating thing down pat. If we use what is given to us in the form of plants (and sometimes animals), we can live just like the Herbivores and Omnivores do, in harmony, in the natural kingdom.
In today’s new ‘green’ world – we are made to believe that ‘all-natural’, ‘organic’, ‘free-range’, ‘local’ and ‘pastured’ are reserved only for the gourmet and the affluent. Not true.
Within 15 minutes of where I live, in the heart of the city, is Waverly Farmer’s Market – here you can buy fresh produce, bread, cheese, flowers, sauces, juice, coffee and more for at least 50% or more less than what you spend at a chain grocer. Some of the farmer’s accept SNAP (food vouchers) and EBT cards.
Within 45 minutes of where I live, in the beauty of the countryside, you can pick your own potatoes right out of the ground, blueberries off the bush, eggs and chicken straight from the hen house, apples from the tree and tomatoes from the vine. Using the pick-your-own strategy, you score even more goods and produce for even less money — and the taste, don’t forget the taste!
If you want to see what a month’s worth of dinner-lunch recipes would look like, using local ingredients when possible and REAL food ingredients always, time-saavy, budget friendly – kid approved. Wait until you get your hands on what I’m working at…
Keep eating, REAL Food Changes People!
Nira