Brown Bag Lunches Kids Will Love
Chef Domenica Catelli Gives Tips on Making Tasty Lunches for Your Kids that Also Save You Time
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Play CBS Video Video Cool School Lunch Variations Domenica Catelli, author of "Momalicious," shares her ideas with Jeff Glor for how to get kids to eat their packed school lunches.
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(iStockphoto)
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Special Section Back to School Tips, trends and facts for a successful school year.
As part of the "Go Back to School Early" series, chef and mom Domenica Catelli, author of the cookbook "Momalicious," shared on "The Early Show" Friday a few fun and innovative ways to make brown bag lunches tastier.
Catelli said getting the kids involved in planning their school lunch menu is a good idea, even if you give them just a few choices, such as oranges or apples, soup or sandwich.
"Don't leave it open-ended," Catelli said. "Know what they like. Also, if you bring them to the grocery store, have them pick something from the produce aisle first -- a veggie and fruit for their lunch."
But what if you have more than one child? How do you manage the week-long menu for multiple taste buds?
The key to picky multiple palates is to be prepared, according to Catelli. "There is nothing worse than having three different lunches to make in the morning rush."
However, Catelli has a remedy to avoid crazed mornings. She freezes sandwiches. If well sealed, she says, the sandwiches can be frozen a couple of months. She added you want to be careful of freezer burn.
Catelli said, "I make them for a week all on Sunday night. By lunchtime, the sandwich is thawed and serves as a cooler for the lunch."
Catelli's Tips for Packing Lunches:
Freeze your sandwiches. We save time during the week making sandwiches on Sunday for the next week and freezing them. This works with turkey and cheese, PB & J, or AB & J (almond butter and jelly). You can't freeze lettuce or tomato, so bring these on the side. Keep the sandwiches in a sealable plastic bag or wax paper bag. They will be thawed out by lunch and not in the least bit soggy. Get the kids to help and make an assembly line Sunday night, one can spread mayo, someone else stacks the turkey & cheese, someone to cut and bag. You can make with roast beef or chicken as well.
Pack non-squishy fruit! (brown bananas are always in the garbage). List of non-squishers: apple slices, grapes, frozen organic berries, orange slices, pineapple, these hold up and are delicious at lunch. Tip: don't peel the apples for more nutrition, and sqeeze a lemon over them to prevent browning. Sprinkle with sugar or honey to counter lemon taste.
Veggies and Dips. Some studies show that less than half of children are getting the recommended 5 servings of veggies a day. You've heard this tip before--kids need a dip with their veggies. You can make a hummus or a high-protein creamy yogurt dip that lasts at least a week. It is satisfying, easy to throw together and delicious....have kids pick their veggies (cucumber, baby tomato, celery, carrots, Romaine spears, bell peppers, jicama, etc.) if you can, have some of these choices growing in your garden--children are more invested in food that they've helped grow.
Think outside of the brown bag and bring the thermos back. When we were kids they were part of the lunch box, now you have to buy them separately. Thermoses are a huge time and money saver. When the weather turns cool nothing is quite as soothing as chicken noodle soup from home or a homemade version of the classic canned tomato soup.
All bread is not created equal. Check bread ingredients--careful of hidden sugars, high fructose corn syrup and hydrogenated oils. Get a bread that is low in sugar but high in iron for teens.
Homemade sodas--Get two recyclable sports bottles and alternate each day for ease. Can control the amount of sugar, avoid high fructose corn syrup, good for the environment, and cheaper. Can do a visual of teaspoons of sugar in a glass of water to show how much sugar in a soda- almost 10 teaspoons of sugar in a can of Coke (comes out to about a 1/4 cup).
***As important as it is to consider what to put in a lunch is what to make sure you do not put in a packed lunch. Some lunch pantry no-nos--what to have and what not to have in the pantry. Avoid: dyes, high fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated oils, fake sugars, and prepackaged lunches high in preservatives and sodium.
Catelli's Tips by Age Group:
Ages 6-10--Kids in this age bracket are absorbing nutrients like crazy. From www.drgreene.com: Due to their smaller, fast-growing speedy metabolisms, and less varied diets, infants and children are more vulnerable to health and developmental damage. Give them an organic option in their lunchbox each day--to make it affordable, go with an in-store named brand--have many options now in grocery stores. And, no need to hide the ingredients--establish their healthy ways now. Have fun--add a handwritten note, joke or picture in your child's lunchbox.
Ages11-16--Adolescents are harder to change; set in their ways and there is peer pressure. Growth and physical changes are so high during this period---high nutrient foods are needed--especially calcium and iron. Avoid diet colas, etc. junk foods high in salt--have to make your food taste good. Iron deficiency linked to lowered school performance--pack lunch foods high in iron: whole grain bread, beans, green leafy vegetables, nuts and dried fruit. By no means should you put a handwritten note, joke or picture in their lunchbox!
Recipes for Frozen Sandwiches:
Chiara's Favorite Sandwich
This is a simple but delicious sandwich and my daughter Chiara's favorite. You can also take straight from the freezer to the toaster oven and enjoy this sandwich warm as well.
Per sandwich
2 Slices sourdough bread
1-2 slices nitrate-free or imported proscuitto
1-2 tablespoons soft cheese such as brie or goat cheese
Spread a layer of cheese on both sides of the bread
Top with proscuitto.
Enjoy or freeze.
Sun Dried Tomato Pesto, Havarti and Turkey on Multigrain Bread
Per sandwich
2 slices seeded multigrain bread
Slice of havarti cheese
1/2 tablespoon sun dried tomato pesto (see recipe below)
2 slices of nitrate free turkey
Spread the pesto on one side of the bread, top with cheese and turkey.
Freeze and enjoy.
Sundried Tomato Pesto
Ingredients
2 cups sun-dried tomatoes rehydrated in hot water then drained
1/2 cup freshly grated parmesan cheese
1/2 cup - 3/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1/4 cup (packed) fresh basil leaves
1/4 cup (packed) fresh parsley leaves
1/4 cup pine nuts
2 garlic cloves, crushed under a knife and peeled
Fresh ground pepper to taste
Process all the ingredients and half of the olive oil in a food processor fitted with the metal blade. Slowly pour in the remaining oil as the pesto is processing. Blend until the mixture forms a coarse paste; add more oil if you desire a thinner paste.
For more recipes for your thermos and for dips, go to Page 2.
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- This article gives some great tips for packing healthy lunches! However, it also perpetuates a common misconception. The fact is, high fructose corn syrup is NOT an unnatural sweetener, nor is sugar a better option than HFCS. HFCS is simply a sweetener made from corn. It has the same number of calories per gram as sugar and is processed by our bodies in exactly the same way. It is really deceptive advertising for food companies to promote sugar-containing, HFCS-free products as healthier alternatives. All low-nutrient, sweetened foods should be consumed in moderation. Parents should focus on providing and modeling overall healthy diet choices. Focusing on ONE food ingredient, rather than the whole diet, does little to combat the obesity epidemic.
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- Great ideas! As a registered dietitian and consultant to the food and beverage industry, I love to see new and creative ideas for helping parents and kids make healthy choices. However, I did just want to point out that both sugar and high fructose corn syrup contain the same molecules, glucose and fructose. And both contain the same amount of calories, 4 calories per gram. Remember that there are many no calorie beverages available - water, of course, but many others that offer the flavor children love including Minute Maid Light Lemonade, Coke Zero among others. This may be an alternative for many parents instead of making their own soda.
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- bonjour
merci chef doménica, conseils trés interessants, satisfaire nos enfants les améner a manger ce que nous leur mettons dans le fameux "sac brun", n'est pas tache facile..il faut sans cesse rénover..pour les épater.. - Reply to this comment





