Kids Lunches that You'll Want to Eat, too. (2024)

Whether you're layeringyour own quinoa bowl in the wee hours of the morning or have little ones' lunchboxes to pack in addition to your own, it'stough to get creative about healthy, portable, easy luncheswhen you're halfway through eggs. Here's a leg up on the lunch game.

Today: Amanda Hesser's kids' luncheshave been inspiring Food52 readers for years, and she's agreed to share her own strategyfor making great ones.

Our trusty co-founder Amanda Hesser is known for writing theNew York Times Essential Cookbook andCooking with Mr. Latte, but our personal favorite of her projects is a column here at Food52where she lets us in onthe contents ofher kids' lunches and the strategies behind them. In honor of ournewest felt food setsfrom Felter's Market -- which were inspired by Amanda's very lunches-- she's sharing her tips for easy, creative, and delicious lunchbox surprises.

Kids Lunches that You'll Want to Eat, too. (1)BLT with Apple Pie, one of our new felt food sets inspired by Amanda's kids' lunches

Amanda Hesser's Strategy for Making Better Kids' Lunches:

I am no school lunch hero, but I do get in there every week and fight the good fight. Sometimes I come up short, like when I send my kids to school with crackers, a cheese scrap, and an olive or two. And sometimes I feel proud of my creations: a kale and tuna salador a steak sandwich with pickled onions and cilantro. Here area few guiding principles that get me through:

1. Accept that your kids won't eat all of their lunch most of the time. Lunchtime is short and social. Still, even if they eat a bite or two, and taste something new, you've done your job as parent and primary introducer of good foods.

2. From a lunch production perspective, the best lunches are grain, bean, or leafy saladsbecause they can be made ahead and then just spooned into containers in the morning. On good weeks, I'll make a giant batch of rice or a grain salad, and am on easy street for days. Also, you can mix these up through the week by adding a hard boiled egg one day, or a roll of ham the next.

3. The worst lunches to make are sandwiches because a good sandwich(other than ham and butter, trademarked by the French) contains multiple components. This means you have to take these various components out of your fridge, open all the containers and bags, slice, spread, and layer them all. And then you have to close up every (stupid) container and bag before putting it away. Efficiency calamity! And yet, if you read my column, what do I gravitate toward? Sandwiches. Please do as I say and not as I do.

Kids Lunches that You'll Want to Eat, too. (2)Kids Lunches that You'll Want to Eat, too. (3)
A Serendipitous Pair, simmered beans with kale salad, cheese, and crackers;Fluff for Lunch, a peanut butter and marshmallow fluff sandwich

4. Always pack a treat. Stock up on good chocolates and cookies. People remember childhood treats forever.

5.These pickled onions are your best friend. Both sweet and salty, my kids devour them; the onions, tossed onto a salad your child hasn't had before, act as goodwill ambassadors to any new or dubious foods.

6. Another pal is cream cheese. I often use it in place of mayonnaise, with ham, salmon, lettuces, or avocado. You can put almost anything between layers of cream cheese and it'll taste good.

7. Always stock peanut butter and Fluff, so that when you're having a school lunch low moment, at the very least you can send your kids to school with iconic lunch fare: a peanut butter and Fluff sandwich. If the food police stop you, tell them you're educating your kids with vintage classics.

Read on for more about themaker of our favorite nonperishable lunches, and the story of how they came to be.

Kids Lunches that You'll Want to Eat, too. (4)Kids Lunches that You'll Want to Eat, too. (5)
Samantha stitches up a felt food; all 5 of thefelt versions ofAmanda's kids' lunches

When Samantha Sweetman needed a gift for her husband's 7-year-old sister, she decided to make one. "In a single night, I stitched up a felt brown-bag lunch with a sandwich, apple, and bag of chips," she remembers. The gift was a hit. Not long after, Samanthagot a booth at a local craft fair and made a few more felt foods to sell alongside some traditional crocheted items-- the felt foods were all that sold. "I've never heard so many people say 'This isso cute!' in my life," Samantha says.

Coming full circle from that first sack lunch, Samantha'slatest creations are felt iterationsof her 5 favorite lunches from Amanda's column. She set out to recreate just 3, butwith the help of her husband Josh and her mother Ena, ended up making5 setsin a day and a half. "Making Amanda's kids' luncheshas opened our eyes to so many combinations out there-- not just in real food, but in felt, too. A sandwich can be so much more than cheese and bologna."Whether you're more of a smoked salmon person or really just interested in peanut butter and fluff sandwiches (and there's no shame in that), Felter's Market has aset for the kid in everyone.

Shop the felt versions of Amanda's kids' lunches here!

Product and fluff for lunch photos by Bobbi Lin; beans and cheese lunchphoto by Amanda Hesser;maker images byRachel Gabrielse

Kids Lunches that You'll Want to Eat, too. (2024)

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