Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Wise people, please could I ask you to share your best, quickest and easiest post nursery tea ideas. Yaklet will be starting next week & although they give him a big lunch plus tea (quite substantial) at 4ish, the boy has hollow legs. I am picking up by 5.30 & he'll be in bed at 6.30ish so I need things which will be easy for an overtired baby to eat & easy for an overtired mama to prepare. My mind so far has lit on sandwiches and got no further!
Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/22403-quick-post-nursery-teas/
Share on other sites

slice of toast spread with warm tomato puree (i just dollop a spoon on a plate and pop in microwave for a few seconds so it isn't chilly from fridge but then yaklet probably isn't as temperature fussy as mine..) then grated cheese on top, either pop under grill or don't bother, cheese still sticks to it - mini pizza


Or as Goodliz says, freeze a few pots of cooked penne and defrost as you need them, then just stir grated cheese, pesto etc in,


a tortilla wrap with something like tuna and mozzarella inside, then cut into circular slices for easy eating (needs to have something like melted mozzarella to bind filling together or the wrap, unwraps, as it were..


fish fingers


houmous and pitta


scrambled eggs or cheese omelette



just a few ideas you've probably already made a million times, obviously my own baby - the one that I presume is living on love alone as it sure ain't food that's sustaining her - would laugh in my face if I offered her any of these ;-)

Hey!


My girl is at nursery and also has a nursery tea around 3ish I think. I find that when I pick her up she is a little hungry but I havent tried offering her any meal at this time, she is so knackered that I think she would throw it at me! Instead we do milk before bed as normal and I find she often has a little more than on non-nursery days. I also know that the nursery do sometimes give them some little snacks (breadsticks, ricecakes etc) around 5ish if they seem hungry. I hadn't even considered feeding her again...does that make me a bad mother??? :)

My girl also goes to nursery and they have a big lunch and then tea at 4:30 ish. She has a snack in the buggy in the way home and then something else at home- like cheese and crackers, toast, ham or fruit usually. She wouldn't be up for another cooked meal. I think the way the day is structured means that they eat a lot at nursery. Has milk at bedtime still as well.


You could also do beans on toast(homemade or not), pre-cooked baked potato with filling. Crumpets and butter / peanut butter sandwiches. Savoury muffins / eggs.


I have found that in the year and a bit that she has been attending nursery she is usually either a) pretty knackered / grumpy and needing to just wind down after her day or b) wanting to play with her toys she missed in the day. Depends on levels of sleep during the day. Definitely not up for a sit down big meal.

You could just keep something from your dinner the night before to quickly microwave for him? I used to do this a lot for my two, and it was also a good way to encourage them to eat "normal" family food which makes life much easier now as I just cook one meal that we all eat.


Otherwise, I always have pots of tomato based pasta sauce and cheese sauce in the freezer which I zap and add to pasta when needed. Same with bolognaise sauce, an easy solution when I can't be bothered!


P x

Thanks everyone for the great tips. We'll see how it goes but I suspect picky things which require no or minimal cooking are the way forward. I had totally forgotten about toast pizza so I shall revive that & other lunchtime favourites.


Jennyh - you're not a bad mother at all! Just thank your lucky stars that you're not constantly having to think about the next snack / meal every hour....

For 'picky' food you could try making up batches of fritters (eg sweetcorn), cheese scones, cheese or cheese & marmite straws, pancakes (to spread with cream cheese or dal), polenta fingers, savoury muffins, fish fingers, mini quiches, etc and freezing them. They defrost in no time (or in about 10-20 seconds in the microwave). Other quick snacks / teas we have are scrambled eggs, houmous & crudites / pitta, pitta pockets with peanut butter or cheese, banana smoothies, soups (again I tend these in batches and freeze).
My childrens' favourite tea - pasta with butter and parmesan and some broccoli on the side. I use one of the de cecco shapes that cooks in 8 minutes. Alternatively gnocchi rather than pasta. I keep gnocchi and broccoli in the freezer and cook them together - takes 5 minutes max.
I'd be surprised if he wants to eat much at all. Nursery seem to feed them a massive lunch so that they sleep well afterwards and then a mid-afternoon snack and tea. My 2 might have crackers, cheese, fruit, raisins, toast or something occasionally but usually just seem really exhausted and just want a bit of time with us before bed.

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

    • I’ve tried to find details of surgeries being held before but not found any. The section of the Southwark website that details councillors’ surgeries says that: Your locally elected Councillors will be holding a roving surgery programme in the Dulwich Hill area to enable residents to raise any local issues. Residents will be notified by letter in advance of the date, time and specific streets/roads where the surgery will take place.  Surgeries are not held in August, on Bank Holidays, Easter or in Christmas Week.  Dulwich Hill Ward Councillors I’ve never seen any notification of surgeries being held, including on the DH councillors’ social media accounts. I don’t know if any other residents of Dulwich Hill have? Neighbouring wards all seem to have times and places posted for surgeries.   
    • I wouldn't feel too bad about that. It's one of the few degree areas that you can do a BA or a BSc in, so it's a fairly wide-ranging and complex subject. Certainly Truss, Kwasi and Reeves seem to struggle with it.
    • I can't access the article - what's the gist?  I took the markets getting jittery when she was crying at PMQs to be a sign that they trusted her. But maybe it was because they were simply worried about any form of instability.  The NIC hikes have stymied the economy, which we could all see a mile off. Will a wealth tax improve things? Does anyone here think the trickle down has any impact and that chasing out the super rich will help things? Or are we just seeing off the biggest contributors to the economy? And has the Kwasi approach ever worked anywhere else?  Economics is not my strong point at all, I'd love to know others' opinions, but it seems to be she has few options, especially as the party is so divided. 
    • does either of them have a surgery? probably not over summer, but I thought they had to give the opportunity for their constituents to meet them.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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