Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Packing Lunch For A Picky 5 Yr Old


mama2two

Recommended Posts

mama2two Enthusiast

My daughter is on a gluten-free diet so I send her lunch to school. Lately it's been a PB or sunflower seed butter sandwhich everyday. I did mix it up a little by using waffles to make the sandwhich this past week, but I would like to give her a little more variety. I would appreciate any suggestions. I seem to have run out of ideas. I also send her bottled water and some fruit. I don't send a big lunch because she eats slow and evidentlly they don't give them much time. As I said she is very picky, won't eat cheese, any sauce, hardly no veggies. I had been sending rolled up lunch meat, but last time I sent this she didn't eat it, maybe I can try again. Also some days I would bake chicken nuggets for her and send those, but lately she doesn't eat those. I thought it was because they were put in the container while still warm and got mushy, so I let them cool, first. Now I guess I am starting to ramble, but any suggestions would be appreciated. thanks.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



missy'smom Collaborator

As you've discovered it is very important to cool down any breaded foods before adding them to the container.

My son's 9. Here are his lunchbox staples. He doesn't have alot of time to eat and is picky and talks alot but I try to pack a small amount of a variety of foods and colors and so far it's working for us. Little by little as he liked things we wrote it down and so this list has developed and I post it on the fridge and work off it every week, so I'm not constantly having to re-think lunch.

Rice- fried rice, rice balls

Hard boiled egg

Vegetables- My son doesn't eat alot of veggies but I'm trying to add a small amount everyday of the ones he likes-just one or two pieces and two kinds

steamed broccoli,

kabocha(Japanese pumpkin) thinly sliced, breaded, frozen and deep fried in the morning

sweet potato, a piece of a roasted one leftover from dinner or sliced and simmered(sometimes I add a little gluten-free soy sauce and a pinch of sugar to the water) or balls of mashed sweet potato

edamame(soy beans) in their pods

an occasional cherry tomato

a small slice of an ear of corn

a baby yukon gold or red potato, roasted

a chunk of roasted butternut squash

carrots cut with a mini cutter-leaf, flower etc. cut from a large carrot and placed in a container of water in the fridge or slightly cooked and frozen, remaining "waste" goes into fried rice

Main dishes

homemade breaded chicken tenders(prepped, frozen and then fried as needed)

ham slices

meatballs

hot dogs-cut like an octopus(I sometimes do these in batches and freeze in a container) or slice and sauteed in BBQ sauce

mini hamburgers without the bun, made ahead, frozen raw and defrosted, cooked as needed

leftover meatloaf

plain pasta with a little butter and chopped ham or mini meatballs, tossed in the tiniest bit of pasta sauce,

fresh fruit or jello made with unflavored gelatin and 100% juice

apple sauce

dried fruit

Darn210 Enthusiast

I bought the Thermos brand wide mouth food jar (10 ounce size, I think). I bought the Target brand first and it was a total waste of money - didn't keep the food warm. The Thermos brand works GREAT!

Now, once a week, I send pasta. I use the Kraft Mac&Cheese powdered cheese from the blue shaker can and make it into mac&cheese but you could do it with spaghetti sauce or butter and parmesean, too. The kids have asked me to send it more often. If you use a thermos, don't forget to preheat it with hot (almost boiling) water.

I also plan on sending a hot dog this way, too, but I haven't tried it yet. I've got a rice casserole that would work, too, but we usually don't have adequate leftovers for that.

blueeyedmanda Community Regular

One of our members on here makes their own homemade lunchables which sound good.

One of my coworkers has 4 children and does the same thing only with regular crackers since the cost of lunchables times 4 kids is high.

You can do apples with PB and raisins. Like a carmel apple only healthier.

NewGFMom Contributor

If you put a a paper towel in the thermos with the chicken nuggets they may not get so soggy.

But in general, some days my super picky kid just doesn't eat his lunch. I don't even think about it because, I know he likes it. So, for whatever reason he just didn't feel like eating much lunch that day. Kids have weird metabolisms that way. Some days they seem to live on air and some days you feel like you just need to tilt the refrigerator at them while they open their mouths...

Good luck!

2Boys4Me Enthusiast

Missy's Mom - does your son have access to a microwave at lunch or does he eat all his potatoes, hamburgers and meatballs from a thermos or cold?

missy'smom Collaborator

The past two years he's been eating them room temp-no thermos, just a small icey thing in his lunch box. We've been doing this since pre-school. K-2 he had microwave in the classroom so he got used to it warmed-up. It took him a little while to adjust to room temp again but now he's fine with it.

I usually warm up meatballs or meatloaf in the am if they're coming straight from the fridge, in hopes that the texture will be a little softer than if they're put in his container cold. I also also add a tiny bit of worchestershire sauce, garlic and parsley to the hamburger meat so it doesn't taste like cold beef. The potatoes are seasoned and nicely browned to add flavor too.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



2Boys4Me Enthusiast

Thanks. My kids don't have access to a microwave either, but so far taco salad and stirfried rice, beef or chicken and veg seem to be working okay in the thermos. We are also limited in what we can send because we are not supposed to send peanut butter.

taweavmo3 Enthusiast

I've tried adding variety to my son's meal as well.....but then I finally realized that he didn't want variety! He has a sandwhich every day, and had a sandwhich every day pretty much all of last year, lol. The only thing I change it up with is brown rice tortillas, I'll also get those to make sandwhich rolls.

As far as sides go....here are a few of our staples:

Apples with peanut butter/honey

Cashews, pistachios or sunflower seeds

chips with salsa

pickles

craisins or any other dried fruit (pineapple is good too)

We use Laptop Lunches (you can find them online) to pack our lunches. These are the coolest lunchboxes ever! They make it very easy to pack a visually appealing lunch that makes kids want to dive in. Hope that helps!

buffettbride Enthusiast

I do the homemade lunchables a bit. Glutino round crackers and then I cut the turkey the size of the cracker and send in the Kraft cracker-stacker cheese.

5 might be too young to enjoy salad, but DD also eats a spring mix salad with walnuts, fresh shredded parmesan, and Annie's gluten-free raspberry vinegarette dressing.

We do leftover taco/taco salad quite a bit, too, and soup in her Thermos (definitely heat it up before putting the soup in so it stays warm by lunchtime).

We use the Laptop Lunches lunchbox too Open Original Shared Link which seems to help encourage packing fresh foods.

I've also been packing apple slices w/ caramel dip and I make home made trail mix (plain M&Ms, unsalted peanuts, raisins, sunflower seed kernels) for a snack.

gfgypsyqueen Enthusiast

Don't overlook the cool factor in your childs lunch box. My daughter informed me that the other kids were making fun of her lunches. (She has nut allergy. And eats home lunch everyday) At that point her only lunch option was rolled lunch meat in one baggie and bread in a separate baggie. I have no idea why, but that was her favorite. Now we make home lunchables. Nacho chips and cheese. Crackers, deli meat cut into shapes, cheese occassionally and also in shapes. Sometimes cold homemade chicken nuggets. Rose apples are another favorite (Whole apple slices almost all the way through to look like a rose bud.) Snacks are fruit roll ups. And a juice box of some sort. She also loves the thermos of buttered pasta. As a perk I send in mini cupcakes every now and again too. At least her home lunches are starting to look more like the other kids and they get envious that she has cupcakes or other cool snacks.

Kid sister also brings home lunch to daycare every day. (She gluten-free/CF and shellfish allergy) They can heat the food so that is a huge help. She LOVES any meat covered in ketchup. Mainly she gets a version of left over dinner. Grilled chicken, homemade chicken nuggets, hamburger, hotdogs, pizza make up her normal lunches. She doesn't like pasta all that much. Loves fruit and some veggies.

I am working on getting both kids to like cold pizza. That is a great breakfast or lunch option for me!

Nikki'smom Apprentice

I make home made Lunchables and my kids named them 'mamables'! LOL

For my 7yr old I send in a thermous rotiserie chicken cut up and dipping sauce.

I've also make mac and cheese and heat it up just before she elaves the house.

We've done peanut butter sandwiches.

yougurt with an ice pack.

sometimes I send side of chips or a gluten-free' snack bar.

Guhlia Rising Star
I bought the Thermos brand wide mouth food jar (10 ounce size, I think). I bought the Target brand first and it was a total waste of money - didn't keep the food warm. The Thermos brand works GREAT!

Now, once a week, I send pasta. I use the Kraft Mac&Cheese powdered cheese from the blue shaker can and make it into mac&cheese but you could do it with spaghetti sauce or butter and parmesean, too. The kids have asked me to send it more often. If you use a thermos, don't forget to preheat it with hot (almost boiling) water.

I also plan on sending a hot dog this way, too, but I haven't tried it yet. I've got a rice casserole that would work, too, but we usually don't have adequate leftovers for that.

The Thermos brand FUNtainers come in all sorts of kid friendly designs and they stay hot for hours if filled with boiling water first. If you do hot dogs, make sure to keep them in boiling water in the FUNtainer so they stay hot. If there's a lot of air in the container, it won't keep the food hot enough. I also sometimes add cut up hot dogs or ham to macaroni and cheese.

One of our members on here makes their own homemade lunchables which sound good.

One of my coworkers has 4 children and does the same thing only with regular crackers since the cost of lunchables times 4 kids is high.

You can do apples with PB and raisins. Like a carmel apple only healthier.

The homemade lunchables idea is a good one. I generally use either rice crackers or blue diamond nut thins because they refrigerate well. This works well with lunch meat and cheese, but it also works well with nut butters and jelly, raisins, or marshmallow cream. Also, the small nacho lunchables is gluten free, or at least it used to be.

KHumphrey Newbie

I actually don't have a child yet (soon- I'm due in December), but my husband has celiac disease and packing his lunches can become just as much a challenge. He likes variety and it can be difficult with his lunches.

Things that have worked include: tuna salad on a bed of lettuce with a pickle, taco salad, turkey and cheese rolled up with a little bit of mustard in the middle. I have also bought some of the beans and wieners and chicken and rice containers (in the same aisle as the spaghettios). He likes that for something new. I do make him mini pizzas too on gluten free english muffins. He doesn't even have to warm those up.

Of course, I always have to have a desert such as homemade cupcakes or cookies. I find I do a lot of baking for him (mostly using potato and corn starch). Another thing, he won't eat the apple I send unless it is cut up into wedges. He's actually just a kid at heart.

Try some of those ideas. Hope it helps.

mama2two Enthusiast
I actually don't have a child yet (soon- I'm due in December), but my husband has celiac disease and packing his lunches can become just as much a challenge. He likes variety and it can be difficult with his lunches.

Things that have worked include: tuna salad on a bed of lettuce with a pickle, taco salad, turkey and cheese rolled up with a little bit of mustard in the middle. I have also bought some of the beans and wieners and chicken and rice containers (in the same aisle as the spaghettios). He likes that for something new. I do make him mini pizzas too on gluten free english muffins. He doesn't even have to warm those up.

Of course, I always have to have a desert such as homemade cupcakes or cookies. I find I do a lot of baking for him (mostly using potato and corn starch). Another thing, he won't eat the apple I send unless it is cut up into wedges. He's actually just a kid at heart.

Try some of those ideas. Hope it helps.

thanks for your suggestions and good luck with your baby!!

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Join eNewsletter
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - cristiana replied to Scatterbrain's topic in Sports and Fitness
      5

      Feel like I’m starting over

    2. - knitty kitty replied to Jmartes71's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      8

      My only proof

    3. - Wheatwacked replied to Jmartes71's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      8

      Related issues

    4. - NanceK replied to Jmartes71's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      8

      My only proof

    5. - Wheatwacked replied to Scatterbrain's topic in Sports and Fitness
      5

      Feel like I’m starting over


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,295
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    LaniH
    Newest Member
    LaniH
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • cristiana
      Hi @Scatterbrain Thank you for your reply.   Some of these things could be weaknesses, also triggered by stress, which perhaps have come about as the result of long-term deficiencies which can take a long time to correct.   Some could be completely unrelated. If it is of help, I'll tell you some of the things that started in the first year or two, following my diagnosis - I pinned everything on coeliac disease, but it turns out I wasn't always right!  Dizziness, lightheaded - I was eventually diagnosed with cervical dizziness (worth googling, could be your issue too, also if you have neck pain?)  A few months after diagnosis I put my neck out slightly carrying my seven-year-old above my head, and never assigned any relevance to it as the pain at the time was severe but so short-lived that I'd forgotten the connection. Jaw pain - stress. Tinnitus - I think stress, but perhaps exacerbated by iron/vitamin deficiencies. Painful ribs and sacroiliac joints - no idea, bloating made the pain worse. It got really bad but then got better. Irregular heart rate - could be a coincidence but my sister (not a coeliac) and I both developed this temporarily after our second Astra Zeneca covid jabs.   Subsequent Pfizer jabs didn't affect us. Brain fog - a big thing for people with certain autoimmune issues but in my case I think possibly worse when my iron or B12 are low, but I have no proof of this. Insomnia - stress, menopause. So basically, it isn't always gluten.  It might be worth having your vitamins and mineral levels checked, and if you have deficiencies speak to your Dr about how better to address them?    
    • knitty kitty
      @NanceK, I do have Hypersensitivity Type Four reaction to Sulfa drugs, a sulfa allergy.  Benfotiamine and other forms of Thiamine do not bother me at all.  There's sulfur in all kinds of Thiamine, yet our bodies must have it as an essential nutrient to make life sustaining enzymes.  The sulfur in thiamine is in a ring which does not trigger sulfa allergy like sulfites in a chain found in pharmaceuticals.  Doctors are not given sufficient education in nutrition (nor chemistry in this case).  I studied Nutrition before earning a degree in Microbiology.  I wanted to know what vitamins were doing inside the body.   Thiamine is safe and nontoxic even in high doses.   Not feeling well after starting Benfotiamine is normal.  It's called the "thiamine paradox" and is equivalent to an engine backfiring if it's not been cranked up for a while.  Mine went away in about three days.  I took a B Complex, magnesium and added molybdenum for a few weeks. It's important to add a B Complex with all eight essential B vitamins. Supplementing just one B vitamin can cause lows in some of the others and result in feeling worse, too.  Celiac Disease causes malabsorption of all the B vitamins, not just thiamine.  You need all eight.  Thiamine forms including Benfotiamine interact with each of the other B vitamins in some way.  It's important to add a magnesium glycinate or chelate supplement as well.  Forms of Thiamine including Benfotiamine need magnesium to make those life sustaining enzymes.  (Don't use magnesium oxide.  It's not absorbed well.  It pulls water into the intestines and is used to relieve constipation.)   Molybdenum is a trace mineral that helps the body utilize forms of Thiamine.   Molybdenum supplements are available over the counter.  It's not unusual to be low in molybdenum if low in thiamine.   I do hope you will add the necessary supplements and try Benfotiamine again. Science-y Explanation of Thiamine Paradox: https://hormonesmatter.com/paradoxical-reactions-with-ttfd-the-glutathione-connection/#google_vignette
    • Wheatwacked
      Your goal is not to be a good puppet, there is no gain in that. You might want to restart the ones that helped.  It sounds more like you are suffering from malnutrition.  Gluten free foods are not fortified with things like Thiamine (B1), vitamin D, Iodine, B1,2,3,5,6 and 12 as non-gluten free products are required to be. There is a Catch-22 here.  Malnutrition can cause SIBO, and SIBO can worsen malnutrition. Another possibility is side effects from any medication that are taking.  I was on Metformin 3 months before it turned me into a zombi.  I had crippling side effects from most of the BP meds tried on me, and Losartan has many of the side effects on me from my pre gluten free days. Because you have been gluten free, you can test and talk until you are blue in the face but all of your tests will be negative.  Without gluten, you will not create the antigen against gluten, no antigens to gluten, so no small intestine damage from the antigens.  You will need to do a gluten challange to test positive if you need an official diagnosis, and even then, no guaranty: 10 g of gluten per day for 6 weeks! Then a full panel of Celiac tests and biopsy. At a minimum consider vitamin D, Liquid Iodine (unless you have dermatitis herpetiformis and iodine exasperates the rash), and Liquid Geritol. Push for vitamin D testing and a consult with a nutritionist experienced with Celiack Disease.  Most blood tests don't indicate nutritional deficiencies.  Your thyroid tests can be perfect, yet not indicate iodine deficiency for example.  Thiamine   test fine, but not pick up on beriberi.  Vegans are often B12 deficient because meat, fish, poultry, eggs, and dairy are the primary souces of B12. Here is what I take daily.  10,000 IU vitamin D3 750 mg g a b a [   ] 200 mg CoQ10 [   ] 100 mg DHEA [   ] 250 mg thiamine B1 [   ] 100 mg of B2 [   ] 500 mg B5 pantothenic acid [   ] 100 mg B6 [   ] 1000 micrograms B12 n [   ] 500 mg vitamin c [   ] 500 mg taurine [   ] 200 mg selenium   
    • NanceK
      Hi…Just a note that if you have an allergy to sulfa it’s best not to take Benfotiamine. I bought a bottle and tried one without looking into it first and didn’t feel well.  I checked with my pharmacist and he said not to take it with a known sulfa allergy. I was really bummed because I thought it would help my energy level, but I was thankful I was given this info before taking more of it. 
    • Wheatwacked
      Hello @Scatterbrain, Are you getting enough vitamins and minerals.  Gluten free food is not fortified so you may be starting to run low on B vitamins and vitamin D.   By the way you should get your mom checked for celiac disease.  You got it from your mom or dad.  Some studies show that following a gluten-free diet can stabilize or improve symptoms of dementia.  I know that for the 63 years I was eating gluten I got dumber and dumber until I started GFD and vitamin replenishment and it began to reverse.  Thiamine can get used up in a week or two.  Symptoms can come and go with daily diet.  Symptoms of beriberi due to Thiamine deficiency.   Difficulty walking. Loss of feeling (sensation) in hands and feet. Loss of muscle function or paralysis of the lower legs. Mental confusion. Pain. Speech difficulties. Strange eye movements (nystagmus) Tingling. Any change in medications? Last March I had corotid artery surgery (90 % blockage), and I started taking Losartan for blood pressure, added to the Clonidine I was taking already.  I was not recovering well and many of my pre gluten free symptoms were back  I was getting worse.  At first I thought it was caused a reaction to the anesthesia from the surgery, but that should have improved after two weeks.  Doctor thought I was just being a wimp. After three months I talked to my doctor about a break from the Losartan to see if it was causing it. It had not made any difference in my bp.  Except for clonindine, all of the previous bp meds tried had not worked to lower bp and had crippling side effects. One, I could not stand up straight; one wobbly knees, another spayed feet.  Inguinal hernia from the Lisinopril cough.  Had I contiued on those, I was destined for a wheelchair or walker. She said the symptoms were not from Losartan so I continued taking it.  Two weeks later I did not have the strength in hips and thighs to get up from sitting on the floor (Help, I can't get up😨).  I stopped AMA (not recommended).  Without the Losartan, a) bp did not change, after the 72 hour withdrawal from Losartanon, on clonidine only and b) symptoms started going away.  Improvement started in 72 hours.  After six weeks they were gone and I am getting better.  
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.