Days of Soccer Night Meals: Feeding your family when you don't have time to breathe. Have you seen the study that announced the undue pressure we’re placing on moms with our society’s focus on providing home cooked meals? This news has given me pause, I worry I am contributing to that pressure because one of my missions here at Peanut Blossom is to inspire you to cook real food. It is healthier, it tastes better, and I actually think it is fun. But I don’t do it every night. Sometimes I don’t do it every week! I’ve written about my struggles with meal planning and my attempted fixes. Our meal planning solution worked fantastically all of last school year. I still believe it is a great program, you can read about it here. But now that my girls are getting older, this year has brought a new challenge to our family–sports nights. They're wrong. Director: Fede Alvarez. 30 Days of Soccer Night Meals: Feeding your family when you don’t have time to breathe. October 8, 2014. Don’t Breathe gets a little less interesting as it proceeds to its inevitable conclusion, but it works so well up to that point that your heart will likely be. I’m getting just a tiny taste of what families are going through with after school activities for older kids. Between transportation to and from the activity, the practice itself, fitting in homework and baths and everything else, I can see how dinner on those nights is daunting. That drive- thru is just soooooo very easy to go to, isn’t it? And there’s that pressure I mentioned. Your evening is packed. You’re exhausted. Everyone is starving. Ok mom, now put a home cooked meal on that table! I asked my friends over on Facebook about it and it turns out a lot of you have the same struggle: But wait a minute, how do we define “home cooked”? Jenny from Dinner: A Love Story had a brilliant response to that study that was published in the New York Times. You can read it here but she reiterates the most important point–if you had a hand in preparing it, it is home cooked. A peanut butter & jelly sandwich? Home cooked. Cereal with a pour of milk and some orange wedges? Home cooked. Grilled cheese & tomato soup heated up from your pantry? Home cooked. I have fallen prey to my own high standards and failed. When faced with my pantry & refrigerator on soccer nights, I want to cry from not having the energy for whipping up a casserole. I feel guilt passing over a bowl of macaroni & cheese to my kids. Now I realize I shouldn’t! And neither should you. To help us both overcome that fear of peeking into our pantry I’m sharing today’s “3. Days of Soccer Night Meals.” Feel free to substitute “football, basketball, dance, chess club,” you know what I mean. And are some of these ideas obvious? Probably but they sure don’t feel like it at 6: 4. This post is NOT sponsored. I will be mentioning a few brands of products within this post but no one has paid me to do so. If it is mentioned it is because I truly love and purchase that product and want to help make your grocery shopping/planning as simple as possible. Obviously feel free to substitute anything as fits your family’s tastes. Don’t Breathe review: Director Fede Alvarez reteams with producer Sam Raimi and lead Jane Levy to deliver one of the best thrillers of the year. For over two-thirds of the exhilarating horror movie Don’t Breathe, young burglars are trapped in the home of a blind man they’re attempting to rob, which doesn. Don't Breathe movie info - movie times, trailers, reviews, tickets, actors and more on Fandango. Days of Soccer Night Meals: Last- Minute Pantry Raiding: Let’s start with the easiest category. You haven’t planned ahead, you’re in a pinch, everyone is screaming for food. Try grabbing: 1. Scrambled eggs, toast with butter or jam, fresh fruit or applesauce or a few raw veggies like cherry tomatoes & carrots. Pasta with your favorite jarred sauce. Grilled cheese & tomato soup with fresh fruit. Macaroni & cheese served guilt- free with a side of carrot sticks and whatever fruit you have. Bonus points if you stir in some shredded rotisserie chicken. Mom of the Year Medal if you steam some broccoli from the freezer. Suped up frozen pizza: Stock your freezer with plain cheese or margarita pizzas. Top them with your mixes based on the leftovers in your fridge. Check out this post for more ideas on fancying up a pizza. Grown up PB& J: You can serve the classic to the kids, but I highly recommend these simple additions for making it special. Mix and match to your heart’s content: super thin apple slicesbananashoneybacon. Mix & Matches: These recipes are one notch up from the pantry raiders. You’ve planned ahead enough to stock your freezer with a few staples and you have a few fresh odds and ends laying around. Mix and match these for a rounded meal and we’ll count this as 4 more suggestions towards our 3. Protein: Frozen breaded fish cutlets, we love the tilapia we buy in bulk at Costco. Flavored chicken sausages from the refrigerator case, we love most Aidell’s varieties particularly the Chicken & Apple and Spicy Mango with Jalape. Costco carries the most amazing french bread baguettes by Le Petit Francais. They take 6- 8 minutes in the oven directly from frozen. Veggies/Fruit–pick 2 of these if you can: whatever fresh fruit is in seasoncanned pineapple, peaches, or pearsapplesaucebag of frozen steam vegetables. I buy the Steam. Fresh packets by Birds Eye whenever I can. Love their varieties but I generally stick to the unflavored ones and season them myself. Flavor boosters for dipping the protein or veggies: honey mustardranch dressingsour cream or greek yogurt with or without added seasonings. Sriracha sauce–the Peanut LOVES it on her tilapia! Classics: When you’ve mentally prepped yourself for a crazy night, you have the ingredients on hand, and maybe you’re lucky enough to do a little prep work earlier in the day or the night before. These meals are classic family staples for a reason. Sloppy Joes: get the meat mix ready ahead of time and all you have to do is serve it up on buns with sides. Tacos: Same concept as the Sloppy Joes but with a Mexican twist. Quesadillas: Like the grilled cheese but more open to unique and hearty fillings. Add rotisserie chicken, pulled pork, or any mix of leftovers with your favorite veggies or even pineapple. Or not and just do cheese with some sour cream or salsa for dipping. Fried Rice: Another great way to use up odds and ends of leftovers in a quick stir fry. If you’ve never made your own, I highly recommend trying it. So easy and so delicious. Check out my favorite recipe here. French Dip Sandwiches: If you have deli roast beef on hand, you can make this very simple sandwich. There’s something so much more filling with a warm sandwich than a cold one at dinner time. Soup and a Muffin: Growing up, one of our family’s favorite restaurants would serve a long list of soups paired with a long list of muffins. You mixed and matched your flavors when you ordered. I’ve always adored this idea for a meal. So mix and match your own soup/quickbread or muffin recipe. You can make both of them ahead of time so they’re ready to go when you are home. Let’s count this another 6 dinners towards our 3. Soups: Muffins & Breads: Make Aheads/Stock Your Freezer: These are the most complicated to prepare but possibly the easiest to get to the table of anything on this entire list. If you can plan ahead and have these stashed away into your freezer or fridge, all it takes is some simple reheating while everyone gets settled. This is the golden zone of meal prep but also can be the hardest to be consistent with which is why I saved them for last. Chicken Tetrazzini. Asian chicken pasta salad. Chicken spaghetti. Chicken alfredo rice casserole. Chicken gyros: have everything prepped so all you have to do is broil the chicken which takes 1. Irish beef hand pies. Old fashioned beef stew. Chinese noodles with pork and spicy peanut sauce. Looking for more great recipes for your family? Be sure to follow “Bring Back the Family Meal” over on Pinterest: Follow Tiffany Dahle’s board Bring back the family meal on Pinterest. Don't Breathe . Three young thieves (Jane Levy, Dylan Minnette, Daniel Zovatto) fight for their lives after breaking into the home of a blind man (Stephen Lang) who has a dark side. Actor. David Zovatto, Daniel Zovatto, Jane Levy, Stephen Lang, Dylan Minnette. Screenplay. Fede Alvarez, Rodo Sayagues. Producer. Sam Raimi, Rob Tapert, Fede Alvarez. Director. Fede Alvarez.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
November 2017
Categories |