Food is a huge part of the parenting gig. We all start out with the best intentions for meal preparations, but Baby Bunching can quickly put a crimp into your wholesome food plan. New baby comes along and all attempts at homemade baby food, always sitting down as a family, and forcing toddler to eat food served come to a screeching halt.
During your many years of Baby Bunching, mealtime will develop into many different scenes. Our philosophy here is to never get started playing short-order cook (you will totally thank us for this later), and start good habits with your kids now--no matter how much it sucks. This is so when they are five they will at least try green beans and not be rude at friends' houses about the type of bread they will/will not eat.
The road to a stressless mealtime can be seem like an uphill battle most days. Getting your kids to sit down, behave at the table, try one food 15 bagillion times over and over, chew with their mouths closed and not talk about potty at the table are all part of challenge. Before even getting to the behavior battles, you have to get them to actually eat the food. Finding good meals that everyone in your family can enjoy is many parents #1 issue because if the food doesn't please, the game becomes a stalemate.
Tastebudding is a new site started by a group of parents, one is our former college roommate, who are working to find a quick, easy solution for parents to find kid-friendly food. The tastebudding team knows how important it is for us to prepare healthy food for our kids. (Yes, they're talking beyond pizza and chicken nuggets, although you'll find a few of those homemade recipes there as well.) The best part kid-friendly recipes are the ones that come from other parents who have tested them on the toughest critics. Tastebudding overs more than just searchable recipes.
Think Allrecipe.com for kid-friendly food + community where parents can also connect and discuss dinnertime manners, school lunch planning or when to start solid foods. The best part is when you submit your recipes you can add commentary on what works best or doesn't. And those who try the recipe can offer up additional suggestions. They've essentially brought the idea of a cooking club to the web.
Pop on over to tastebudding.com and let us know what looks yummy for dinner tonight.
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Posted by: CoraMONROE25 | Mar 01, 2012 at 01:50 PM