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Thread: Room temperature packed lunches -- ideas?

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    Senior Member lhamo's Avatar
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    Room temperature packed lunches -- ideas?

    The kids were complaining about the lunch at school, so we decided to switch to "home lunch" on a trial basis this month. DS is burned out on sandwiches after two weeks of them. I'm looking for suggestions for other stuff to give him. They don't have access to a microwave at school and we don't have a good thermos (considering buying one, but not this week), so I need ideas for room-temperature foods (not things that need to be reheated). Appreciate your thoughts!

    lhamo
    "Seek out habits that help you overcome fear or inertia. Destroy those that do the opposite." Seth Godin

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    http://www.bentolunch.net/

    I found a lot of ideas in this blog and related ones. It was not just about decoration but what to put in lunches.

    http://lunchinabox.net/faq/

    This one is full of great information, like how to pack and make safe.

    One of my best ideas is to make things in muffin tins, like meatloaf, quiche, macaroni and cheese, etc. The size is perfect.

    Hope this gives you some helpful information.

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    Have them look at some of the ideas and get their feedback. I like that mom uses things made for dinner reappear for lunch sometime in a different format. Such as meatballs or kabobs.

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    Senior Member CathyA's Avatar
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    Let's see.....when my kids took their lunches, I would do things like pb and j, crackers and cheese, red pepper strips, cucumbers, apple, cookie, summer sausage and cheese and crackers, grapes. Sometimes I would buy them those little kits of tunafish and crackers. If its not real warm out, I even think stuff like meat would be okay. If needed, I would put a cold pack in their lunchboxes, next to the more perishable stuff, and it would be fine. They make little cans of tuna that have a pull tab on them. You might be able to find some of those little packets of mayo to send with it. You could pack a pita pocket for them to make a little sandwich out of other things you send. If you add a little cold pack, you could send yogurt. How about hummus and pita chips.

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    I like making basically a lunchable, crackers, cheeses and sliced meats. Also wraps instead of sandwiches helps on sandwich type food. I have done a thin slice of cheese and a slice of lunch meat rolled and pinned with a toothpick as well. I make a potato cheese frittata that you slice into pie shapes and it is perfectly good cold like some quiches would be. My kids only like sandwiches when they are apparently 'epic'. This means more than one meat that is interesting, like adding salami, having lettuce and tomatoes and good mustard. They also like it on a french roll or something interesting. Adding thin cucumbers or red onion is also good. Basically like a Subway sandwich. When we make them that way they will even eat them for dinner.

    Other things that keep for about 3 hours are a boiled egg, celery with soft cheese, a variety of thinly sliced vegies and hummus, chips and salsa with even bean dip, macaroni or bean salad.

    The best part of a packed lunch is making sure there is a little sweet, a couple cookies or a peice of chocolate,

    Good luck, packing lunches is a real job. My daughter would not eat a school lunch until she was 14 because she is allergic to peanuts so we packed for many years.

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    Senior Member SteveinMN's Avatar
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    I know cured meat (like salami, beef jerky, etc.) will keep, but I'd be leery of sliced turkey breast or bologna. Most semi-soft or hard cheeses will keep at least until lunch time. Would it be possible to pack, say, a salad with a frozen piece of chicken or fish on top that would be small enough to thaw by lunchtime and would keep the rest of the salad cold and crisp?
    Success is to be measured not so much by the position that one has reached in life as by the obstacles which he has overcome. - Booker T. Washington

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    Lots of PB & Jelly sandwhiches over the years. Sometimes I used to pack bags of stuff up ahead of time and then lay them out in the morning and the kids could take what they wanted each day - different kinds of nuts, dried fruit, Larabars, bananas, peanut butter crackers, hard boiled eggs, cheese crackers, popcorn, tortilla chips, fruit cups, munchie mix, trail mix, fruit leathers, freeze dried fruit, pretzels, chips, turkey jerky and bananas. I'd try to mix things up so they had a different assortment each week. When they would take cold packs they could have cheese and any kind of meat, cheese or cream cheese sandwich.

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    Senior Member herbgeek's Avatar
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    If you have access to a cold pack, that opens things up considerably. Here's a list I put together for myself for non-sandwich lunch ideas:

    Flatbreads
    Calzone/pepperoni roll
    Stuffed breadsticks
    Tuna/chicken/turkey salad
    Waldorf salad
    Hummus/bean spreads/walnut pate
    Quiche/frittata
    Bean salad
    Grain salad
    Pasta salad
    Green salad with protein
    Meat tart
    Spinach/cheese/herb pie
    Shrimp cocktail
    Chicken nuggets/strips/fried chicken
    Rolled coldcuts/cheese or veggies in middle
    Kabobs/lunch on a stick
    Mini muffins or scones with meat/cheese/veggies
    Roasted veggie w/ greens or grain
    Noodle salad
    Stuffed mushrooms
    Rice bowl
    Cheese/charcuterie plate
    Tortilla-less burrito
    Baked potato
    Greek salad
    Cold soup
    Meat pie/empanada/pastie
    Asian salad
    Chef salad/antipasto
    Salad nicoise

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    You can really pack almost anything if you have (1) an ice pack and (2) a good food jar/thermos. I recommend this one: http://amzn.com/B0017IFSIS
    I had another reliable brand of food jar and, after I'd been using it for over a year, discovered that it was not keeping DD's lunch hot (even after preheating with boiling water). It was barely warm 4 hours after packing. So I bought one of these, filled both with boiling water (without preheating) and sealed. I checked the temp on both 4 hours later, the usual time between when I pack her lunch and when she eats it. The old food jar that I had was around 108 degrees, while the one linked above was over 180 degrees.

    Here is a list of lunch ideas that I made several years ago when I was just beginning to pack DD's lunch:
    http://rosemaryevergreen.blogspot.co...nch-ideas.html
    A few lunches for which I estimated cost (much less costly than school lunch!):
    http://rosemaryevergreen.blogspot.co...this-week.html

    DD's favorite is chicken spaetzle stew. I make a batch every couple of weeks, which makes enough for 5-6 lunch servings; I freeze a few and put a few in the fridge. It's loaded with peas and carrots. She also really enjoys having (chili of any kind) for lunch.

  10. #10
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    Assumes a cold pack is added if needed
    Lettuce wraps
    Potato salad
    Mixed raisins, blond raisins
    Whole meal potato salad
    Sesame sticks
    Dried fruit and nut mixes
    Sushi with cooked fish
    Quick pickles
    Tsukemono
    Frozen juice
    Grapes
    Frozen grapes
    Gelatin with fruit bits
    Date bread, cream cheese and sliced pineapple sandwich
    Small calzones that taste good cold
    Homemade fruit cake with fresh/dried fruit rather than candied fruit Assumes a cold pack is included if needed

    Homemade granola bars
    Energy balls/bars
    Rice Crispy-like bars made with a puffed whole grain, seeds, dried fruit, binder
    Alegria (puffed amaranth, honey, dried fruit, toasted pumpkin seeds), also good with other seeds or nuts
    Sesame honey almonds
    Fruit and nut cookies such as oatmeal-raisin-walnut
    Tea sandwiches—If you make 4 different half sandwiches and halve them, they can have a sort of tea tray
    Hummus and vegetable sticks
    Spanikopita
    Olives
    Mixed salad with grilled meat, dressing in separate container
    Salsa and corn tortilla chips
    Pink lady apples
    Small orange citrus that’s about 1.5 inches across, peeled if necessary
    Tangerines
    Apple or peach turnover
    Homemade yogurt with stuff to stir in separate as desired
    High nutrition tahini based halva (more nuts and fruit than store bought types)
    Deviled eggs- plain, sundriedtomato, etc
    High nutrition quickbreads—looking for recipes using applesauce or pureed dried plum sauce in place of the oil
    Cold cucumber or fruit soups
    Warm Scandinavian fruit soups
    Ambrosia with coconut flakes
    Small bars of cheesecake

    You can also do things like pack hot sloppy joe mix in the thermos and spoon it on to the bun at lunch time. Have children practice at home using their lunch containers.

    Noodles tossed with a tiny bit of oil to prevent sticking in one container and then hot spaghetti meatball sauce in a thermos

    Noodles tossed with a tiny bit of oil to prevent sticking and then the rest of an Asian noodle dish or Indonesian peanut-vegetable-meat sauce hot in a thermos

    For these combo dishes check that the container into which the hot stuff is spooned can handle it

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