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Mommy Truths: Preschool Lunch Ideas

Mommy Truths

The Hard Learned Lessons and Eye Opening Realities of Raising Young Kids

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Preschool Lunch Ideas

I’ve been getting bored with my lunch repertoire for C. and S. and can’t seem to think beyond turkey or ham and cheese, carrot, celery and cucumber sticks and fruit. Sometimes we expand into hot dogs or leftovers at home, but it’s hard to think creatively when they’re clamoring for food and I’m hustling around the kitchen like a short order cook.

C. goes to preschool three days a week so I need to pack him a lunch and they both go to an in-home daycare a couple mornings or days and this requires snacks and lunch. Help - I’m running out of ideas!

Fortunately, I have some very smart and creative friends who helped me out with their lists of lunch ideas. It was interesting to hear that many other toddlers, like mine, want nothing to do with a “sandwich” (unless it’s PB&J) and that inventive gimmicks work the best.

Main Course (sandwich alternatives)

  • Sandwich Roll-Ups - Flatten bread or tortillas, spread with whatever, roll and slice to show spirals. May freeze slightly to make slicing into wheels easier.
  • Raisin Bread Fingers - spread with cream cheese, may add apple & dates.
  • Graham Crackers - spread with cream cheese or peanut butter or topped with cheese, raisins & app
  • Meat Spread - combine 1 c finely chopped cooked beef, chicken, turkey or chicken livers and 1 c chopped celery or onion in a bowl. Add 2-3T mayonnaise, salt, pepper, and garlic powder to taste

We make"homemade" Lunchables. I use a biscuit cutter and cut out rounds of bologna, thick sliced ham or turkey. I also cut out rounds of cheese. I put these in round, small Tupperware containers and then put crackers in a separate container.

  • Leftovers that are ok chilled or room temp - pasta/mac n cheese/ cut-up chicken and rice
  • Hummus and lettuce sandwiches
  • Egg salad, light cream cheese on wheat bread (sometimes with jelly)
  • Greek salad (grape leaves, olives, feta cheese with chopped lettuce
  • Whole wheat pasta with chopped broccoli, olives, feta or parmesian cheese, touch of oliveoil
  • Whole wheat pasta with chopped egg and a touch of mayo
  • Lox, tomato and cream cheese on a whole wheat bagel or the english muffin;salmon salad on whole grain bread or on lettuce
  • Ham or turkey and cheese, cubed, with wheat crackers


My youngest son loves cold pasta (after seeing my first child eating it I know a lot of kids started bringing it to preschool too)…I make wheat elbows or rotini and top it with a little parmesan cheese

  • Mini whole wheat pitas or bagels filled with: - cream cheese and jelly- cream cheese and smoked salmon- cream cheese blended with raisins- peanut butter and banana- jam and banana- egg salad
  • “Cracker sandwiches” with stone wheat crackers and turkey or peanut butter
  • Breaded chicken cutlets (leftover from dinner) cut up and cold for lunch
  • Small yogurts (the mousse kind by Danon sticks best to the spoon for less mess but only comes in vanilla)

    In the Winter I sometimes will give them Chicken Noodle or Tomato soup in a Thermos ( I didn't start this until Kindergarten).


    Snacks/Veggies

  • Celery Sticks, Carrot Sticks, Bread Sticks, Pita Wedges or Rice Cakes spread with- peanut butter- cream cheese, raisins & sunflower seeds- cream cheese blended with apples and dates- a creamy dip or dressing- hummous
  • 1/2 of a pitted avocado... I just squeeze a little lemon on it and send it in with a plastic spoon.
  • Ants on a log: celery sticks stuffed with peanut butter or cream cheese, with a few raisins on top
  • Cucumber sandwiches - sliced rounds with cream cheese in the middle
  • Steamed broccoli or green beans (so they’re softer but still crisp) with Ranch or Caesar dressing or hummus
  • String cheese, pretzels, goldfish, chewy granola bars, peanut butter crackers, yogurt or yogurt drinks (these can double as main course items if yours is picky like mine)!
  • Sliced carrots/peppers
  • Raisins
  • Graham sticks (Earth's Best)
  • Trader Joes rice and seaweed snacks and soy chips (high protein, low fat)
  • Trader Joes dried apple rings or dry mango
  • Veggie Booty, Pirate Booty
  • Shelled edamame is a fun vegetable.S
  • tonybrook Farm smaller sized yogurt smoothies
  • Baby Bell cheese (cute and fun for them to unwrap the wax covering)
  • Corn nuts, sesame sticks, yogurt covered raisins for fun snack
  • Veggies fries or pita chips

  • Dessert/Fruit
  • Cut up strawberries dusted with powdered sugar (they LOVE these), peeled apples with caramel (individual caramel sold in produce dept.- especially this time of year).
  • Any kinds of berries in season
  • Dried fruit: apricots, raisins—even prunes! I also pack cut up pears

I also find that any fresh fruit that is cubed and served with a toothpick for eating goes over well. It is the toothpick that is magical, I believe.

  • Pudding snacks
  • Rice crispy treats (pre-packed), sweet snack items
  • Mini-packaged applesauce
  • Cookies: Fig Newman’s, ginger snaps, chocolate chip cookies, Nilla wafers
  • Mini muffins
  • Homemade oatmeal cookies
  • Fruit bites


Drinks

  • Milk
  • Small bottled water or low-sugar, high vitamin/calcium juice box/drinks
  • Lemon or grapeade juice box (no sugar added)=
  • Apple or grape juice


    Enjoy!


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2 Comments:

At June 11, 2008 at 9:38 AM , Blogger Jill said...

THANK YOU! Thank you so much for this post - my 2yo daughter is just starting preschool next week and your post was one of the top sites to pop up on Google when I searched online.

Your list is great and I'm printing it out to help me with shopping for her lunches.

 
At March 15, 2009 at 12:08 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

thanks......my 4 year old will appreciate this!

 

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