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Whats for dinner Ideas of what to make for dinner tonight


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Old 11-10-2006, 10:50 PM
lcsamano lcsamano is offline
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Default Kid Friendly Dinner Meals

I have 4 children and pleasing them is very hard when it comes to cooking dinner. Do you have any suggestions for kid friendly dinners? I keep telling them that I am not Burger King and they can't have it their way. However, they dont seem to understand.
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Old 11-12-2006, 08:44 PM
vp311 vp311 is offline
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I've found that any kind of "finger food" usually works pretty well.
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Old 11-13-2006, 09:59 AM
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Mama Mangia Mama Mangia is offline
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Kids can be a handful because of these fast food places. Unfortunately - most kids would prefer fast foods or those frozen kiddie meals to a regular meal. You can get around that by making their meals "kiddie friendly".

If you are making chicken for the family - cut small pieces for them, bread or batter the pieces and bake them. At least they are eating healthier - chicken nuggets at these fast food places are filled with phosphates, fillers, etc. Make dipping sauces for them (I have recipes if you need them) and they can enjoy that. Slice potatoes and cut into fancy shapes using cutters and bake as well. Better than deep fried all the time.

Shape ground beef into fingers and roll in flour and skillet fry or bake.

Cut fish fillets into fingers or chunks, bread or batter and bake.

Easy mac and cheese - cook pasta and add a bit of butter and Cheez Whiz.

Buy pasta that is shaped in rings like spaghettio's, or goldfish, the alpabet, small stars, etc. and add to tomato soup. Or add rice.

Cut carrots, sweet potatoes or regular potatoes into fingers and steam.

Make your own french toast sticks using texas toast; make pancakes in fingers or small rounds. Dot your griddle with 2 dots for eyes and a smile; cook a few minutes before pouring more batter over - with practice you can make smiley pancakes.

Sometimes 2 fried eggs for eyes, 2 breakfast sausage links for a smile and 2 rounds of toast (cut from a slice of bread with a biscuit cutter) spread with strawberry or raspberry jam/jelly will make rosy cheeks.

I would have to fix a plate of fingers (chicken or beef) with a small dipping bowl of sauce in the center and the fingers placed around like the sun rays and a cut out baked potato slice between each ray. Using an oval plate gave me a chance to place carrot fingers on one side and a veggie on the other side.

Meatballs always tasted better when they were "baby" ones. I would make big batches of meatballs for the freezer and they were easy to warm in gravy or sauce.

We all eat with our eyes - but I think kids are worse than adults! Pretty or different looking ways of presenting foods can also make a difference.
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Old 11-13-2006, 02:21 PM
mtmomj mtmomj is offline
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Make dinner fun - let them help out. I found that Mac and Cheese or anything with noodles always works for my daughter. Like Mama Mangia said, presentation is key for children.
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Old 11-13-2006, 11:00 PM
vp311 vp311 is offline
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My daughter is 2 and a half. She loves to help me cook, any little bit at all. Any meal that she can help me out she always loves to eat.
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Old 11-14-2006, 11:45 AM
simcooks simcooks is offline
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I have something easy to make here (can be classified as "finger food"), and hopefully makes kids eat their vegetables as well.

http://simcooks.com/108/asparagus-and-bacon-roll/
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Old 11-21-2006, 01:15 PM
lcsamano lcsamano is offline
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Thanks for all of the tips. I actually try to get my kids to help since they seem to always complain about what we are having. I even have had them help with the weekly menus.
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Old 11-21-2006, 02:06 PM
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phoenyxstarr phoenyxstarr is offline
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My daughter is 10, and seems to be past the picky eater stage... of course, this is also the same child that loves broccoli & always has. She helps me out with planning the weekly menu & if the 17-month-old is asleep, she will help me with the cooking too.
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Old 12-13-2006, 11:31 PM
tofumonkey tofumonkey is offline
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the bottom line is, give the kids what they want.

they want the ambience, the cute food, the heavy flavouring.

so by attempting to do that, as mentioned with some of the members here.
It has to be fun and little more on the heavier side?
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Old 12-14-2006, 08:30 AM
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medako medako is offline
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Kids LOVE to help. I've found that any time a child helps to prepare a meal, they're more likely to eat it. I mean, they can't let all of their good work go to waste
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