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Kids Lunch Ideas Birmingham

We all want to feed our kids the best, but how can you really know what's in the food we eat? Supernanny's Nutritionist Yvonne Wake blasts the myths about salt, sugar and fat.

Dr Gee Rw Partners
01384 459621
Lower Gornal Medical Practice, The Health Centre, Bull Street Gornal Wood
Dudley
Bodycare
0121 444 0195
117 High Street, Kings Heath
Birmingham
Sage Wholefoods
0121 449 6909
148 Alcester Road
Birmingham
Holland & Barrett
0121 331 1599
23 Walsall Road, One Stop Retail Park, Perry Barr
Birmingham
Holland & Barrett
0121 321 2439
31-57 The Lower Parade
Sutton Coldfield
General Nutrition Centre
0121 633 8216
Unit 63, The Pallasades
Birmingham
Holland & Barrett
0121 742 0313
2160 Coventry Road, Sheldon
Birmingham
Natures Health Shop
0121 708 2888
Swan Shopping Centre, Coventry Road
Birmingham
Holland & Barrett
0121 382 9897
132 High Street
Birmingham
Tropicana Health & Fitness
0121 351 3110
Forge Lane, Minworth Industrial Park
Sutton Coldfield
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Kids Lunch Ideas

Yvonne Wake By  Yvonne Wake Supernanny Expert 17/05/2007

  • Ditch the bread! Swap sliced bread sandwiches for pitta, tortilla wraps, bagels or savoury muffins. Even the same old fillings will taste better if it doesn’t look so much like a sandwich. Your kids might even be convinced by a no-bread sandwich… a.k.a. a salad!
  • Go crackers! Pack some crispbread or crackers (look for wholemeal and low fat, low salt varieties) plus a filling, and let your kids put a snack together themselves – they’ll love it!
  • That’s soup-er! Lots of lunchboxes now come with flasks. Make a batch of soup at the weekend and heat it up for their lunchboxes along with a hunk of wholemeal bread.
  • Go chunky! Your kids will probably love eating fruit if it’s chopped up into cubes. Try chopping up sandwiches into squares too, or buy some cookie cutters and make a boring old sandwich into a car, star or Christmas tree!
  • Get them involved! Get the kids involved in what goes in their lunchboxes. Give them realistic choices and praise them when they chose healthy options. If they won’t make their own, put out a range of fillings and ask them to make a mystery sandwich for Dad, and Dad can make the kids’. You could even do this the night before, so as to save time on school mornings.

We asked some mums for their most successful lunchbox recipes and made this week-long menu with their suggestions. Try them out, and they may become your own lunchbox hits! Remember that each lunchbox should have some fresh fruit, a crunchy vegetable, a dairy product (e.g. milk, cheese, yoghurt), a protein food (e.g. meat, egg, beans) and a starchy food (e.g. bread, pasta, crackers, potatoes).

Monday

Bagel with low fat cream cheese and tinned salmon; carrot sticks; apple chunks

Tuesday

Pitta with salad and cheese; melon and nectarine cubes; cherry tomatoes

Wednesday

Pasta salad with tuna, sweetcorn and pepper; strawberries and grapes; chunks of red pepper

Thursday

Wholemeal cracker breads with slices of cheese, ham and a hummus dip; cucumber sticks; raspberries

Friday

Tortilla wrap filled with spicy bean mix, cheese and salad; low fat yoghurt; carrot and cucumber sticks.

Yvonne Wake Supernanny Expert

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