Not exact matches
Some of these
containers at the store are over $ 12.00 and if you get the individual
snack packs (like for lunch
boxes) you will pay $ 25.00!
Lunch
boxes, food
containers, baggies and thermoses... shelves and fridge stocked with after - school
snacks and drinks... breakfast items for the brain and the body... tasty suppers that you can make on a busy weeknight... lazy Sunday's around the family table where you can talk about your crazy week... Have you started planning those back - to - school menus yet?
Are they ok to freeze in a
container, I tend to have a few different
snacks in the freezer so I can alternate lunch
boxes.
I have supplied a «
snack box» in her classroom — a plastic storage
container with her name written on it filled with packaged allergy - free cookies and fruit bars — in case of a treat emergency.
The other thing I like about using
containers versus a bento
box now, is I have a drawer full of small various
containers and cloth
snack bags to rotate through while packing lunch items.
To cut down on wasted bags and wrappers, try the fun BPA - free Laptop Lunch
Box, a bento box - like case with several interchangeable containers that hold hot, cold, dry and wet food and practically compel you to fill them with lots of healthful snacks for your ki
Box, a bento
box - like case with several interchangeable containers that hold hot, cold, dry and wet food and practically compel you to fill them with lots of healthful snacks for your ki
box - like case with several interchangeable
containers that hold hot, cold, dry and wet food and practically compel you to fill them with lots of healthful
snacks for your kids.
Whether you send the
snack in yourself or if it is provided by the school, you may want to practice with your child some table - time skills such as putting a straw into a juice
box, opening a plastic
container or zippered bag and wiping her mouth and hands with a napkin while she eats.
Try making lunch into a «bento
box» by buying a cool
container with several compartments and putting
snack - like foods (that together form a healthy balanced meal) with lots of different colors, textures, and shapes.
I don't have much counter space, but it's important to be organized to streamline lunch prep, so I carve out an area on our kitchen island where I can place the lunch
boxes, reusable
containers and bags, and individually packaged
snacks.
I'm amazed at the
snacks that parents pull out —
containers of perfectly chopped fruits, mini
boxes of raisins, small portions of pretzels, Cheerios, and the ubiquitous goldfish, juice
boxes and milk.
Send your kids off to school in style with the lunch
boxes, silverware, napkins, and
containers that will make them the most popular kid in the cafeteria — and, while you're at it, cut back on the waste inherent in disposable paper bags and plastic
snack