If I complained to my father and stepmom that there was not the right
kind of cereal at HER house and they brought me a bag of groceries for her house, what would I think?
Personally I like keeping
some kind of cereal at hand and making my own muesli I know exactly what goes inside it and making your own is so simple and will save you quite a bit of cashitos.
Not exact matches
I grew up in a house that didn't stock sugared
cereal and had
at least two different
kinds of family recipes for Brussels sprouts, so healthy eating isn't exactly a foreign concept to me, but I've definitely lapsed as a 23 - year old living on my own.
the hostel i lived
at offered a free breakfast that consisted
of coffee, tea, white toast with jam, and two
kinds of cereal: rice krispies and corn flakes.
My mom was the best and we always had a nice variety
of cereal to choose from —
at least 4 different
kinds at any given time.
The amount
of sugar - laden
cereal «breakfast» bars out there are really NOT breakfast
at all and
kind of just rude.
Can you explain why the American Academy
of Paediatrics Guidelines for exclusive breastfeeding until six months has now been
kind of modified to starting solids
at four months and why are so many doctor's so keen on rice
cereal?
I will never forget the look on the face
of the rep for Kellogg's when she came to pitch their new (
at that time) «low sugar» version
of Froot Loops and I told her that we would never serve our kids a
cereal with that
kind of color even if it had only 1g
of sugar per serving, and that if you have to trick kids into eating
cereal by making it look like candy, then you are missing the point
of good nutrition.
the homemade
kind), it makes for a creamy
cereal that I'd opt in for
at any time
of day: breakfast, snack time or dessert.
At least that ' s what all
kinds of TV ads were claiming, promoting whole grains and
cereals and other «healthy» breakfast options often loaded...
Where I used to feel frustrated
at not being able to find everything on my shopping list, or having to decide between just corn flakes, muesli, and some
kind of honey puffs in the
cereal aisle, after a year living abroad, I found myself just as aggravated on a trip back to the U.S. by the amount
of time I spent trying to decide between 50 different types
of chewing gum or shampoo.