Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi -

After booking a late November break to Egypt after seeing it recommended on this forum I have just started panicking a bit about food for my little girl. She is decent eater here and mainly has homemade food with some jarred second stage when we are out. She likes cheese, most fruit, root veggies, mince and potato, pasta, bread, cheese, tomoto etc. She is not overly fussy but it does take her a few tries to get into new things. We are going to an all inclusive resort. I know they are all a bit different but do you think that she will be ok eating the food there? Are fruits etc best avoided. What about milk? I will likely still be breast feeding her then so bottles are not such an issue. Packing a weeks worth of jars seems a bit impractical.


Any advice gratefully received.

Thanks

Lisa

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/13419-egypt-and-1-year-and-food/
Share on other sites

Just be aware that a large proportion of stomach upsets in Egypt are not caused by food but by germs picked up from the money; Egyptian notes are generally absolutely filthy. It is a good idea to take antibacterial handwash with you, and use it religiously EVERY time you touch any local money. I am very prone to stomach upsets, but have always eaten whatever I wanted and have never had the slightest problem in several trips to Luxor. There is no need to avoid fruit, but I would try to stick to peelable fruit and vegetables where possible and it's often wise to avoid salad in local restaurants in case it hasn't been washed in purified water, although most of the better hotels will have their own water supplies. Egyptian food is lovely, and I'm sure you will be able to find plenty of the types of food you mentioned. Make sure you only use bottled water for cleaning teeth etc. If you exercise sensible precautions, I'm sure your little girl will be fine with the food.

I have been too Sharm and Hurghada many times and rarely has anyone I have been with had a problem. We took our son when he was 3 and our twins at 7m.


The sort of food on the buffets tends to me made to order omelettes, croissants, bread, fruit, cheese, yoghurt at breakfast. Pasta, salad etc at lunch and a variety of things at dinner. There is always bread and fruit.

Thanks that's helpful. Buffet food should be okay but it is useful to have a back up in terms of jars and definitely better not to have to bring a weeks worth of nappies. Might throw some Ella's pouches just for a backup.


Thanks you have set my mind at rest. My mother had me in a panic last night.

Good plan. Yes I was going to bring the car seat and my usual stock of medicine.


If there is pasta, banana and bread we should be good to go. Add in some sweet potato and cream cheese and it would be her perfect holiday!


I think we are getting a coach from the airport to the hotel- it is a all in package but I will double check. We don't have a car so will need to get a taxi from this end anyways so will likely have it with us. Packing light is no longer an option!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Hi everyone, we are trying to finslise our decision for enrolling our son for 3+ from September and currently considering Dulwich Prep or Herne Hill. We like both and appreciate there is no right or wrong answer but what we like about HH is great focus on early years and also being coed. However if we can avoid the 7+ stress then prefer to do that. Dulwich Prep is closer but the difference is not significant. we know children are very active and busy in DP and they have great facilities, but unlike HH, we don’t know much about their focus on personal development and emotional intelligence, etc! Also not sure about long-term impact of being in boys only school. Difficult decision for us and we appreciate feedback from parents if you can share please.    thank you
    • Yeah that was their old policy. Their new policy is to force you to have a water meter and if you refuse they put you on a punitively high tariff which effectively forces you to have one. I was doing well with my policy of polite resistance which was to say yes fine I'll have one fitted but then not actually book an appointment or cancel the appointments they made. But then I was persuaded that it would be much cheaper anyway. 
    • Lots of lovely lilac shrubs in flower at the moment. Would anyone consider giving me a cutting? It would involve digging out a basal off shoot, roots and all. I'd love one for my new garden but I'm so broke that I have to fill it with plants the slow way!
    • You are welcome to have mine for free. I was just about to post! Three panels - 6ft by 5ft - weathered/natural on one side and painted brown on the other.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...