Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Chat

Join the discussion and chat with other Mumsnetters about everyday life, relationships and parenting.

How do lunchboxes work nowadays?!

86 replies

BestZebbie · 23/08/2021 10:53

My DS has just started Year 2 and has asked to take a packed lunch for the first time ever. Fine.

I always took a packed lunch to school myself - in primary school I had an indestructible hard shell plastic lunchbox with a character on the outside and a screw top flask that fitted securely in one half of it, food in the other half.

Do these hard lunchboxes still exist?
All the lunchboxes I can find in shops or online searches are soft bags with a bottle on the outside or not included - how does the lunch not get squashed in these? Don't they then get full of crumbs inside and impossible to clean after the first use, as you can't just rinse them under the tap and tea towel them dry instantly the way you can a thick plastic one? I am feeling slightly sick at the idea of a banana and then the open peel spending the day loose in one already.
I guess the alternative is a tupperware box from the kitchen cupboard, but I'm concerned my DS won't reliably be able to open and close the lid securely, so a couple of times a week all the rubbish will fall out of it everywhere after lunch. A tupperware also has the issue of being separate from a drinks bottle giving the opportunity to lose two things each day rather than one (they have to put their lunches on a trolley when they arrive instead of keeping them in a backpack on their peg).

Also - I had sandwiches and also veg sticks etc all lovingly wrapped in clingfilm every day for the 15 or so years of my education - I presume this isn't the done thing nowadays, so how do you transport sandwiches to school without them collapsing if they aren't clingfilmed up? I know you can get beeswax wrap things but don't they have the same issues of immediately getting manky and hard to clean as soon as they touch butter?

I did not realise it would be this/at all complicated (and I haven't got round to thinking about what stuff to put in it yet!).

OP posts:
Thread gallery
5
TheWordsmithsApprentice · 23/08/2021 13:48

Also I find foil better than clingfilm

DC’s school doesn’t allow foil because it’s bad for the environment Hmm DS once had to show his foil packed sandwich to the class as an example… We have to use sandwich paper so the teachers can drive to school with a good conscience

If you get him to help you clean his bag, he'll soon remember to close the box properly! Don't send obviously juicy foods and it'll be fine.

tywysoges · 23/08/2021 13:52

Soft lunchbox with a sistema Bento box inside here. Sandwiches in paper bags. Lunchbox in the washing machine whenever needed.

tywysoges · 23/08/2021 13:58

paper bags - they’re cheaper at the supermarket though. I reuse them as many times as I can, and they’re compostable.

frogsbreath · 23/08/2021 14:03

I use sistema compartment lunchboxes inside the insulated lunch bag

One has a flat bottle for the juice and we have two which have separate sandwich areas so we don't use clingfilm/foil or sandwich bags

Space in the boxed areas for yoghurts or wee tubs of fruit etc

AlwaysLatte · 23/08/2021 14:09

I use these sistema hard lunchboxes. I hate those dreadful bacteria havens that are often used - we used to have them but as soon as they get a little tear you have to throw them out.

How do lunchboxes work nowadays?!
AlwaysLatte · 23/08/2021 14:11

paper bags - they’re cheaper at the supermarket though. I reuse them as many times as I can, and they’re compostable.
Doesn't the condensation from the ice pack make it tear though??

234Pepperplant · 23/08/2021 14:20

We have a soft insulated “box” with a handle. It easily contains a water bottle, ice pack and a compartment type sistema box containing a sandwich or filled roll on one side and some grapes and popcorn in the two small sections. No peel, no film/foil/paper, no spoons to get lost, no smears of yogurt, easy to carry cos handle, plastic box goes in the dishwasher each night. The insulated box/bag rarely needs more than crumbs shaking out. Easy peasy.

Peanutsandchilli · 23/08/2021 14:22

Things don't get squashed in soft bags. Cling film or foil is fine for sandwiches. Small tubs for little items. I wipe them out with antibacterial wipes. You're overthinking it all.

Garman · 23/08/2021 14:22

You're making this very complicated, I got hard plastic Sistema lunchboxes that have a shallow bit perfect for keeping a sandwich together without wrapping it and other sized compartments and tubs.

pastabest · 23/08/2021 14:28

@AlwaysLatte

paper bags - they’re cheaper at the supermarket though. I reuse them as many times as I can, and they’re compostable. Doesn't the condensation from the ice pack make it tear though??
What icepack?

I've never felt the need to put an icepack in a lunch box, I definitely wouldn't put one in a paper bag.

OP what I do is put a Tupperware and a small bottle inside a soft lunch bag.

School encourage the kids to throw rubbish away rather than putting it back in the lunch boxes but I'm struggling to get upset about a banana skin touching anything anyway sorry.

The soft bags I have are wipeable but on the rare occasion it gets grotty I shove it through the washing machine.

I've never had any issues

wendz86 · 23/08/2021 14:42

We have a soft one but i put sandwiches/fruit etc in little hard plastic pots with lids so they don't get squishes or anything . Also keeps lunchbox cleaner.

Champagneforeveryone · 23/08/2021 14:49

DS is thankfully past this age now, but was of the soft lunchbox generation. I still remember the scandal when I revealed that I put his through the dishwasher at least once a week, as the labels categorically forbade it.

We also have a metric ton some of those plastic tubs from IKEA that you buy in a multipack, as well as some Sistema ones for more leaky items.

playplayplay · 23/08/2021 15:13

I keep all our empty cereal bags and use them for sandwiches, then recycle them with carrier bags at the supermarket bag recycling

daisyjgrey · 23/08/2021 15:38

Yumbox. Cleaning dried yoghurt out of the corners of an insulated lunch bag makes me want to hurl. Buy a yumbox.

tywysoges · 23/08/2021 16:00

@AlwaysLatte

paper bags - they’re cheaper at the supermarket though. I reuse them as many times as I can, and they’re compostable. Doesn't the condensation from the ice pack make it tear though??
I have never used an ice pack 😬
mafted · 23/08/2021 16:00

Soft lunchbox with hard boxes inside.

I hate packed lunches and this talk of cling film and foiled sandwiches is making me 🤢

purplesequins · 23/08/2021 16:51

@daisyjgrey

Yumbox. Cleaning dried yoghurt out of the corners of an insulated lunch bag makes me want to hurl. Buy a yumbox.
that's what the 20min fast cycle of my washer is for. lunchbag dries over night.
Betsythecheshirecat · 23/08/2021 16:53

We have the Smash soft lunch boxes with the bottle carried in the pouch on the side. I use sistema sandwich boxes and little tubs for everything so rarely use cling film. I fling the lunch bag in the washing machine every so often but it gets a wipe out daily.

KeyWorker · 23/08/2021 16:58

You’ll be best with a bento style box, then you don’t have to use cling film/foil to wrap things. My DD has a Yumbox but other brands do bento boxes.

contactornotthatisthequestion · 23/08/2021 16:59

@ILoveUsernames

I really miss those hard lunchboxes from the 1990's!!! I had a care bear one and a polly pocket one too Grin these soft ones are just not the same and the systema ones don't have a handle as far as I can tell
still have my my little pony one, though its now repurposed as a tool box...
Anoisagusaris · 23/08/2021 17:06

Sistema lunchbox with compartments inside a soft lunch bag/pack/box. I use them to keep the food cool rather than to store the actual food. People call them lunch boxes on this thread but they’re not really.

ChiefPotterer · 23/08/2021 17:25

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

alrightfella · 23/08/2021 17:35

The best combination I've found is the sistema bento box inside a soft lunch bag. Just protects it a bit and makes it easier to carry.

reluctantbrit · 23/08/2021 17:46

In primary school DD has a rectangle cool bag and all food was in tupperware container, small ones for fruit, a bigger one for sandwich and snack, small drinks container plus a yoghurt and spoon. Two small or one thin large ice pack and off she went.

She had an extra waterbottle for during the day.

In secondary school she has the sistema box with the compartments and her cool bag has a separate zip big enough for a 330ml bottle. Again, ice packs to keep things fresh.

I wipe the cool bag clean with a damp cloth and throw it in the washing machine on a gentle cycle every now and then.

Swipe left for the next trending thread