Feeding Kids on the Busy Days

Although it is not always perfectly on time, I can handle dinner most days. You know the drill: Thaw meat the night before. Check recipes in the morning to see about cooking times and prep work. Start prepping dinner at lunch time.

It’s the breakfasts and lunches that seem to really eat up our day. (Slight pun intended.) Just about the time I get into a groove with writing or school work, someone gets hungry. By the time we prep, eat and clean up lunch, I completely forgot where we were.

Here is a solution for those days you just don’t want to stop and prepare food in the middle of the day.  

1. Cook ahead. This is the express version of freezer cooking. I’m not one to take a whole day off to cook the month’s meals ahead, although that works well for some people.  However, there are a few foods  I cook ahead to make breakfast easier.

  • Pancakes
  • Waffles
  • Egg Muffins (recipe below)
  • Granola
  • Baked Oatmeal

If I do havphoto(50)e time to make breakfast one morning, I just make a double or triple batch of pancakes, waffles or egg muffins and freeze the rest. I double my granola when I make it and store it in the pantry. My baked oatmeal recipe makes a 13 x 9 pan, so I just divide it into two smaller pans, bake one and freeze the other unbaked.

 

 

2. Prepare foods ahead. This works well for lunches. Occasionally I cook something like macaroni and cheese or soup for lunch. Sometimes we have leftovers or “re-purposed” leftovers or sandwiches. However, on the days I don’t want to stop and cook, we have a “snack lunch”. The kids can choose which items they want to eat and get them without me. Here are a few ideas:

  • Cheese cubes
  • Hard-boiled eggs
  • Lunch meat slices
  • Fruit
  • Veggies and dip
  • Homemade granola bars
  • Rice cakes and nut butter
  • Nuts

On a day when I have more time, I wash all the fruit and cut it up if necessary. I cut veggies photo(51)and make the dip. I boil a dozen eggs and leave them in a clearly-marked egg carton. I’ll individually wrap the granola bars in baggies, so they only have to grab one out. Since I have older ones, they can help the younger ones find their lunch items.

3. Make a list.

My children are very intelligent. At least that’s what I tell myself at parent-teacher conferences. 🙂 However, they are not very good at finding things that are right in front of their noses. For this reason, if I have items made ahead, I’ll put them on a list labeled “Breakfasts” and “Lunches/Snacks” on the refrigerator. Then, the kids can see what is available without me there.

If I’m really trying to be a supermom, I  put the items in categories so they will have a balanced meal. For example, I would list “Choose One” and put protein sources under that category + “Choose One” and put carbs/fruits under that category, etc.

I’m sure you will be able to come up with your own ideas based on your family’s preferences. Here is a recipe you might like to try for easier mornings. They freeze and reheat pretty well.

Egg Muffins

Makes: 12 Muffins

Preheat oven to 350 and grease the cups of a muffin tin.

Beat 12 eggs in a bowl with salt and pepper. Stir in 1/2 – 1 cup shredded cheese of your choice. Add diced ham, cooked bacon or sausage and veggies of your choice. Use a 1/4 c. measuring cup or ice cream scoop to evenly distribute among the 12 muffin cups.

Bake for 20 – 25 minutes until set.

The muffins will be beautifully puffed up when they come out of the oven, but they will fall. You didn’t do anything wrong. Unfortunately, they just do that.

The eggs muffins that are left after breakfast can be cooled and frozen in individual sandwich bags. To reheat, just cook for 30 seconds in the microwave on the defrost setting, then 30 seconds to 1 minute on high.

Enjoy!

For you, the reader: How do you feed your kids on busy days? Do you have any ideas to add to my breakfast and lunch lists?

2 Comments

  1. Some great suggestions here! I have a hard time with some of the more common suggestions like doubling up on a meal and freeze the leftovers simply because we have such a large family that the pots only hold enough for the one meal in the first place. It’s never ending, isn’t it?

    I’d love to get in the habit of making up meals for the freezer once weekly, or at least have some premade breakfast items on hand! I have a son coming of an age where he’s capable of cooking a few things, and he’s done scrambled eggs for all of us quite often since Christmas. I plan to work with him a little at a time and train him in cooking, as it seems to be an area of interest as well as talent for him, and maybe get myself some relief on cooking… thus opening up the chance to do some cooking ahead of time, granting myself even more of a reprieve.

    YAY! New season of life, just around the corner! 😉

    • JenniferLSelf

      I know exactly what you mean, DaLynn! I have enjoyed every season, but I am so enjoying right now when the children can play alone as needed and can take care of basic chores and meals. I’m in the middle of Kay Wills Wyma’s, Cleaning House right now. It is about her one-year experiment with teaching her kids, ages 8-14, to do things for themselves. I’m really getting lots of ideas from it!

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