Since I’ve been telling fish stories… read this

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Since I’ve been telling fish stories… read this

I struggle with eating the right foods as well as portions because as a child my mom used to feed me as well as my two other siblings adult sized portions. We ate fruits and vegetables but a lot of other stuff we shouldn’t. Even now she still tries to feed us extremely unhealthy things. I want to start eating more healthily and organic and I always thought about how I’m not going to do what my mom did to us to my kids. My question is “Did you always eat this way as a child and it’s just a learned habit you have from your own parents?”

No matter what your parents fed you, you can take control over what you eat as an adult.  The portions may have gotten larger as you grew older and spent more calories during exercise, etc.  If you had vegetables and fruits, you’ve got a good start that some others haven’t had.  Also, eat until you’re almost full; not totally full. 

My parents fed us fairly well.  We weren’t allowed much junk food in the house and no soda except holidays or birthdays.  McDonald’s was a huge treat.  My dad had a vegetable garden for most of my childhood.  My mom was a good cook and served vegetables at every dinner which was most often made from scratch.  We had fresh broccoli, beans and carrots often.  BUT on the negative side we were served fish sticks, which is like the 70’s version of chicken nuggets.  We had many frozen and canned vegetables (peas, corn, carrots, spinach, creamed spinach, beets), of which, I mostly refused to eat except the first three.  There was jello,  fake maple syrup, Skippy peanut butter and very little variety.  I hadn’t had nearly the number of vegetables and fruits or even  my children have, but that also comes from our world getting smaller due to global agriculture.  My parents’ food choices were fairly balanced tilting to the side of healthier choices.

Funny thing, as a kid, I used to crave the junk.  I would go to friends’ houses and chow down on Twinkies, Devil dogs and Suzy Q’s.  I ate so much candy especially during the summer months.  During my teens I ate tons of junk food and soda.  I probably undid all the good that my parents started.   I still have a sweet tooth and I still stop at McDonald’s occasionally.  BUT those occasions are few and far between.  My children consider it a huge treat.  When we do go I get them the kids meal with apple slices (WITHOUT the caramel dipping sauce) and milk (not chocolate).  I get a medium sized fries that I split between the four of us.  So, it’s not as much junk and still with some healthier items. 

If you look at my photos you’ll see the kids portions aren’t nearly the size of the adult portions.  Most dinners I have 1/5 meat/fish/chicken, 1/5 rice/grains/potatoes, 3/5 cooked vegetables/salad.  Portions play a huge part in our diets.  Eat what you need and stop before you’re full.  Low fat diets make us crave more fats which we’ll try to make up until we’re satisfied.  Feed your craving, just remember moderation when it comes to anything— but especially the bad things. Don’t obsess over foods— whether they’re healthy or not.    

If you’re living in your parents’ house, educate them on better foods and eating.  There are great resources like Jamie Oliver, Michael Pollan’s, Marion Nestle and Mark Bittman’s books.  Supersize Me! and Food Inc. are pretty powerful movies that can help.  Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution series can probably watched online. 

So, it’s never to late to start.  Good luck!

Must have been fish week! I did a grilled halibut with a rub my second grader had made for dad for father’s day! That same meal I had taken big beautiful sea scallops and also dipped them in the rub, sauteed them in a little butter then added some onion, tomato and garlic and last minute threw in some organic micro greens. Some organic chicken stock and teensy bit of fresh cream served over whole wheat mezzi rigatoni and dinner was served! The kids devoured the grilled halibut and liked the scallops (but not nearly as much as the fish) and literally threw their faces into the pasta! They loved it! I can’t wait to try the catfish that you made and “Dad’s Tartar Sauce” YUM! I think the kids will love it too! -Amy

Amy,

Sounds great— sounds like two meals too!   Do you know what was in the rub? 

V-MKRET

Fishy, Fishy, Fishy, Fish… Parts II & III

Friday we came home in a rush to eat dinner after spending the day at the lake.  I had put some Wild Caught Pacific Cod (I usually choose it over the Atlantic variety due to over-fishing) out to defrost earlier.  Cod is a delicious flaky white fish with mild fishiness.  Most children will eat it. 

I made a pan-fried fish similar to that you’d see in fish ‘n chips, except I didn’t have the time to make the chips, so I relied on a standby— Trader Joe’s frozen Organic Jasmine Rice- ready in 3 minutes!  The fish was ready in 10 from start to finish. 

 I dipped the filets, as is, into seasoned flour (salt and pepper in it) then into a pan with hot 1/4 inch deep canola oil.  Turned after a few minutes to each side.  I served a simple homemade tartar sauce with it.  

Beforehand I had made a salad and prepped the CSA chard and beet greens (chopped then steamed then shocked).  We never seem to get enough of the chard, kale and beets to serve alone at a meal, so I often mix two or three together.  As I’ve mentioed, I include the chard stems but not the kale or beet greens because they’re too tough.  You could include them in juicing.  Once fish is ready, reheat with butter, salt and pepper (a real pattern with us).   

My Kids Eat Really Eat This’s Mom’s Simple Tartar Sauce 

  • 3 Tbsp mayonnaise
  • 1 sm-med dill pickle chopped
  • 1 Tbsp capers
  • ground pepper to taste

Mix together. 

We don’t often have the same fish or “main” within days of each other, but we came awfully close to it this week.  My youngest had his tonsils out this morning so my husband and I agreed to get a fish for dinner (it’s soft and tasty). 

I bought catfish because it is one farm raised fish I will buy.   It’s also easy to cook and most children like its mild flavor and its firm texture AND it’s not as pricey as most other wild caught fish.  I also bought broccoli, since it can be slightly overcooked to get rid of its hard texture but retain its integrity.  My husband had made a lemon risotto a couple of days ago so that was our grain and we also had CSA baby NZ spinach. 

He prepared the catfish with a cornmeal crust.  Put cornmeal on plate with salt and pepper.  Dip the moist (from fish monger, nothing added to moisten) filets into seasoned cornmeal; flip to cover both sides.  Then place fish into pan with hot vegetable or canola oil.  Turn after a couple of minutes.  Total cooking time about 7 minutes. 

My husband made a tartar sauce (different and better than mine) and I also had some Boar’s Head Savory Remoulade Cajun Style Mayonnaise.  It’s a bit spicy for most kids.

 

 My Kids Eat Really Eat This’s Dad’s Tartar Sauce

  •  3 Tbsp mayonnaise
  • 1 Tbsp capers
  • 1 small pickle
  • 1 tsp fresh1dill (1/2 tsp dried)
  • 1 tsp tarragon (1/2 tsp dried)
  • 1/4 tsp Dijon mustard
  • squeeze 1/4-1/2 lemon

Blend in small chopper (mini cuisinart) until smooth.

If you’d like the Lemon Risotto recipe, let me know! 

All three loved the dinner.  My little one mostly concentrated on the fish (without the harder edges).  He only had a spoonful of rice, one bite of broccoli and one tiny forkful of spinach, but he still got a popsicle for dessert.

© 2010 mykidsreallyeatthis.com

Love, love, love your site!! What is the best way to print recipes. Katie

Thank you, thank you, thank you!!

If you’d like something specific, I can email it.  Otherwise you can print it by selecting the recipe/instructions and “print selection” with your printer settings.  The font is light so if you are having trouble, please let me know. 

I need to have better links to each recipe because my recipe page isn’t easy to navigate.  If I have time (ha-ha) I will create a new page for recipes. 

Fake Organic Labeled Foods

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Fake Organic Labeled Foods

Taco Night

My sons love tacos!  But they prefer the way I do them.  When my eldest got tacos at school one day he told me how they weren’t very good because they didn’t have all the “things” we have on tacos at home- “No vegetables! Not even lettuce! It was just meat and cheese.”  Ugh, school lunches…another topic for another time

I set up a taco bar on our island in the kitchen.  The offerings at the bar can change according to what’s in the fridge or cabinet.  Mostly on the bar are bowls with shredded lettuce, black beans, rice, shredded cheese, chopped avocado and/or avocado salsa, tomato salsa, tomatoes, chopped cilantro, cabbage if we’re having fish tacos,  most often I serve beef but sometimes other meats or fish.  I give them hard and soft tacos- corn shells and flour tortillas.

Last night’s was organic beef (no hormones, antibiotics, etc) made with shallots, garlic and tomatoes and a pre-packaged spice mix from Trader Joe’s (careful— I used only 1/2 the packet and it was very spicy for the kids), but you can mix chili powder, cumin, garlic, oregano, paprika and black pepper to get a good taco seasoning.  I also put out the left over swordfish and my eldest jumped at the chance to have in a hard corn tortilla.  I used up the black rice too.  If the kids don’t want all the stuff in the tacos I serve some things on the side.

It really doesn’t take long to prepare, mostly time spent chopping, and they get a well-rounded meal that they absolutely love!

FYI- you can get organic corn tortillas.  I don’t like to buy conventional corn as most corn in the US is genetically modified. 

© 2010 mykidsreallyeatthis.com