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Suitable packed lunch ideas for fussy eater?

27 replies

Cakedoesntjudge · 17/05/2016 13:31

Apologies in advance as this is long to provide the background.

Ds (now almost 6 and coming to the end of year 1) ate everything when I was weaning him, there was nothing I found that he wouldn't eat, but gradually he just started refusing more and more foods once he hit about one and a half.

He won't eat any veg except for sweetcorn (this includes any form of unprocessed potato - though unhealthier options such as potato waffles and alpha bites are sometimes acceptable. Obviously these have to come from a packet in the freezer because if I make them they are the work of the devil). Nothing spicy or with herbs, nothing involving bread or bread-related products, nothing hot - if it's cooked this will provoke a breakdown and the food must be allowed to go stone cold before he'll even make eye contact)

In fact thinking about it, it's quicker to list what he does eat:
Ham
Chicken
Cheese
Picnic eggs
Cocktail sausages
Occasionally pasta or rice as long as it's plain
Yoghurts
Most fruit
Chocolate/sweets.

He sees me, his dad and surrounding family eating healthily (I have checked this with his dad as we are separated), we have tried saying no puddings unless he clears his plate, then tried ok if you try one bite of x then that's fine, this results in about an hour of very upset crying and if he actually brings himself to put something in his mouth he retches instantly. I have tried sticker charts and ensured he understands why it's important to eat healthily, I've tried hiding veg by blending it/hiding it in food, tried making it into fun things, tried growing our own and getting him to help make the food. Tried taking him to the supermarket/showing him recipe books to encourage him to pick something he fancies. Tried saying ok well if you don't eat it you go hungry. For about a year I put a lot of emphasis on the healthier eating, but I do now go with gentle reminders that eating more healthily should be an aim for everyone - I have read about a gazillion articles and am well aware of the school of thought that making it a big issue makes it worse so I don't. Nothing has worked (I am open to suggestions). GP isn't concerned as he will eat fruit. However he is slightly overweight (this isn't a massive issue as far as I'm concerned. He has registered at 99th percentile since he was born and he isn't massive, he just isn't slim, I just am conscious that if his attitude towards food doesn't change, it will become a bigger problem later on in life). The GP did mention that and say to restrict the amount of fruit he has because of the sugar content.

When he started school we got the list of acceptable lunchbox items - usual sort of list. With his limited diet there's not much I could pack that he'd actually eat and I hoped that if I signed him up to school dinners that he would try new things if he saw his peers eating them. This has worked a tiny bit. He loves the school meatballs and spaghetti and the lasagne - obviously will not touch this at home. But there remains a lot of things he doesn't like. He is desperate to take packed lunches but when I explain to him what he would be allowed to take in he says he wouldn't like that either. I asked the school when he started to let me know if he wasn't eating enough and I'd try and find enough that he'd eat to fill a lunchbox. They've never said anything and I've checked at a couple of parents evenings and they've said its not been a problem, so I presumed everything was fine.

This morning I was completing his lunch options at school. He got particularly upset about one day where the options were sausage and mash or salmon salad and new potatoes. His teacher saw and came over and decided to make the ever-so-helpful and unreasonably judgey suggestion of "well that's fine, mum can send in a packed lunch that day, I know it's a bit of extra work for you mum but I'm sure you can cope with it for a day. To make him happy" rude.

He was ecstatic, I am now panicking hugely about what he can take in that he will actually eat. As it happens, he's with his dad that day so I text to let him know and he called and said he'd been meaning to talk to me about it as he went in to have lunch with them the other day, ds ate 3 bites of jacket potato grudgingly and then the cheese, flat out refused to touch the salad. After he went to play his dad went to speak to the dinner ladies who told him that was normal for ds and although they tried to encourage him to eat more and try new things he never does.

So my request for advice is two fold really -

  1. Can anyone think of anything we haven't tried that has helped with their fussy eaters?
  2. What an earth can I put in his packed lunch? At the moment I can only think: ham, a selection of fruit and a yogurt.

I'm getting to the point where I am beginning to find this quite a problem, if it's a phase it seems to be lasting years and just getting worse and I am a bit sick of all the judgey comments I've started to receive from people who presume we just don't make the effort to address it. Not to mention being really bothered that his teacher thinks I don't provide a packed lunch purely because I can't be arsed.

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
Cakedoesntjudge · 19/05/2016 17:41

verbana I'd not even considered it before to be honest but now you've mentioned it he hates brushing his teeth and he struggles with lots of noise - he says he has to cover his ears and go somewhere off to the side at play times when it gets too much. It's definitely something I'll discuss with the doctors.

dancingqueen sorry I should have mentioned, he does eat any of the chocolate based cereals breakfast wise - eg coco pops or chocolate pillows. I've long since given up trying to encourage healthier cereals though I always make sure they're there just in case he fancies trying them.

leeds I hadn't considered just plain hard boiled eggs Blush thank you for suggesting them!

madsprocker I much prefer 'natural lo-carb eater' to fussy eater haha! I might start referring to him that way! Joking aside, I will have a look. It would probably do me a favour cutting down on carbs too so I might be able to find some ideas we could both eat.

irvine I wish that was the case with ds school Sad no sweets, nuts, crisps, fizzy or juice drinks, cakes, any form of chocolate biscuit bar thing and I'm sure I read no yoghurts which seems a tad ridiculous and I will double check that one but I'm sure I saw it and remembered commenting on it at the time. Maybe I'll just throw a frube in and feign ignorance!

misty I wasn't sure about what the school would make of picnic eggs and cocktail sausages. I'm hoping if I ask they'll say they're allowed! Fingers crossed.

spaghetti I hadn't thought about that, I might give that a go and see if it works for ds too, thank you Smile

elisheva you make a good point - if ds had complete control over his dinner each day it would be exactly the same thing. I haven't tried rice cakes actually - I think they're grim so I've never thought about picking them up haha! Might give them a shot.

tartan thank you - I will look into the book and DOR - I'm up for trying anything at this point! I do reassure myself by the fact that other than his eating habits ds is a healthy child. He's rarely ill and he's full of energy. He also only really happily drinks water and occasionally milk - most people think I enforce this but I never have! It's always been his choice! So he's got at least that going for him Wink

zeeka it has amazed me from this how common plain pasta is as a good choice! Maybe I should stop being worried about that one! Good point with the systema lunch boxes too. I think I have one knocking around already actually.

wilting tell me about it, this is the latest in a long line of issues I've had with his teacher. The school hired her last minute at Christmas after the previous teacher announced she was off to teach abroad and she has received numerous complaints (the exact words of the headteacher, not mine) since. She had been being a lot better but this did beyond irritate me. If she'd pulled me to one side and discussed it with me I'd feel differently but doing it in front of my son right before the official start of school did irk me somewhat. I'll look into that book too though thank you. I have discussed with ds before that tastes change and foods can be cooked in different ways that make them taste better - tonight he asked to try cauliflower cheese and I was secretly jumping for joy but that was a no go as well. Never mind, I'll persevere.

peas I think I could live with it more if there was at least one other vegetable he would eat other than sweetcorn! It drives me a bit nuts, but I'll just have to live with it for now I think. You've probably hit the nail on the head with the not in the way most people would enjoy part - perhaps I'm placing too much emphasis on what the adult expectation of a normal lunch would be.

loose ds did used to have packed lunches at pre school but there was a lot more he hadn't cut out then and they were brilliant and understanding and were fab at working with me. This is a bit harder with the school as I never see the dinner ladies/lunchtime supervisors to discuss it with them and the teachers never seem to talk to them from what I understand so far!

justabigbear yeah I think I will have a word with his teacher and also steal your ta. I've discussed it with previous teachers but not this one in particular. It's probably something they need to know about anyway as they've started doing little mini cookery lessons with them and ds has so far refused to add anything except cheese to whatever they're making - they're probably a tad confused!

notagiraffe well that gives me hope for the future!! Every so often I sit and think about when ds is 20 odd, going out to eat at a restaurant and requesting "oh no, I'll just have cheese please, yes, with a slice of ham and maybe a few bits of sweetcorn dotted on a plate?" Always makes me laugh in despair.

Thank you everyone for all the advice - I feel a lot better about the fact that at least there's things I can send him in with now and have some information to look at. Fingers crossed!! Good luck to everyone else with fussy eaters too, I'm sure we'll get there one day Flowers

OP posts:
notagiraffe · 19/05/2016 20:32

OP, DS now loves Chinese crispy duck, prawns, curries, Mexican food, spinach, peppers etc. It all worked out because we finally learned to stop fussing and fretting and just let him live on cheese sandwiches for seven years until he got bored of them. Like lots of very fussy eaters, he was far more inclined to try new things in their very processed not made at home variety first and then we'd gradually introduce home made versions. Agree that it could be sensory processing issues. DS has ASD and it's one of the indicators for autism when they test for it.

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