Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 Mike & Irene, I love the plastic white lids on mason jars too, especially for things that react with metal (like kombucha). However, in my experience they do not seal as well as the metal canning lids. (Meaning, slow leaks - not good for lunch bags.) You can get around that by pushing the round flat disk part of the metal canning lid up into the plastic lid. You can get it out later to wash, but it usually stays in well until you pull it out. You get the best of both worlds - a good seal, and the convenience of 'one' lid. I've struggled with what to pack my kids for lunch (kindergarten, 3rd and 5th grades). It's hard to send them with good food that doesn't make them feel deprived. One option is to make sandwiches on sprouted grain bread. You can also make chicken salad etc, and put it in a jar or small thermos. (Thermos makes a small stainless steel thermos with a wide mouth - plastic lid though. They're expensive, but worth it. I found mine at Wal-Mart.) Other things that are packable are hard boiled eggs, rolled up/chunks of meat and cheese as finger food, nuts, organic fruit & veggies and homemade popcorn made with coconut oil and sea salt. More than once my kids have told me that other kids now bring some of the healthy things that they do. They've quit asking for most junk. (We went the WP way about 2 years ago.) For a drink, I just send water. They drink enough milk at home. Best of luck! Jan western land > [MAP] and put them in those fabulous little half-pint wide-mouth jars > with white plastic lids. I use those containers all the time when I > pack meals to go. > > [irene] Where do you get those? > > [MAP] They're mason jars, so anywhere you buy mason jars, like > independent hardware stores (Ace, True Value, etc), supermarkets, > Walmart, general stores, etc. The jars and lids I have are made by > the company Ball and I see them all over the place. Those HPWM jars > are a tremendous blessing! Sturdy as heck, but glass, and the > advantage over the great small Pyrex bowls (that I also often use) > with the snap-on blue plastic lids is that the screw-on lids of the > mason jars won't accidentally come off and they're fairly watertight > for transporting liquid stuff. The mason jars are also much cheaper > than the Pyrex jewels. For drinks, I use the half-pint regular-mouth > mason jars, an essential part of any MAP-sponsored picnic. > > Mike > SE Pennsylvania > > The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2005 Report Share Posted January 7, 2005 Thanks to all for the great lunch suggestions. I will start first by getting sprouted tortillas and sourdough bread to replace the staple items the kids are used to eating. Last night I made a wonderful meat loaf and cooked it in a muffin stone instead of in a loaf pan. It was great! I thought about sending this in lunches cold with a bit of homemade ketchup. I made the banana bread recipe from NT and have been sending that for snacks for the boys. They love it. I slather it with some butter and pack it in a tiny tupperware so it doesn't get beat up in their back pack. Does anyone have a good ranch-type salad dressing recipe? They love salad and it packs well. I had been using an organic bottled recipe but it has soybean oil in it! Thanks again! ===== Green Blessings, " What would the world be, once bereft Of wet and of wildness? Let them be left, O let them be left, wildness and wet; Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet. " From Inversnaid by Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844–89) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2005 Report Share Posted January 7, 2005 Ranch Dressing: Use half creme fraiche or sour cream and half homemade mayo as the base. Then put lots of salt, pepper, garlic, thyme and a bit of lemon juice to flavor it. Yummmm. > Does anyone have a good ranch-type salad dressing recipe? They love > salad and it packs well. I had been using an organic bottled recipe > but it has soybean oil in it! > Thanks again! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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