Search Smart Spending:

Commodifying the family dinner

Posted Nov 02 2007, 12:12 PM by Donna Freedman
Rating:

Americans not only need to be reminded to eat with their families, they have to be told how to do it. At least that’s the impression I got from radio spots touting “Family Dinner Night” as a way to, among other things, keep our kids off drugs.

Then there's the print ad for a brand of frozen entrees: mom, dad and two kids enjoying lasagna from what looks like a glass dish, not a microwave tub. “Real dinner and great conversation any night of the week,” the ad copy exults.

It goes on to say, “Get your family talking!” – and provides a Web site to help the conversation along.

Let’s see: We don’t seem to know that families are supposed to eat together. Once at the table, we need cue cards to help us talk. Oh, and a frozen dinner is helpful, too.

Yes, I know we’re all busy, busy people and that nuking a lasagna floe may seem like the only way to get food into our mouths. But let me throw out two reasons to find time to cook.

•    You’ll save a lot of money on food up-front.
•    Over time, you’ll save money on health care.

'Food deserts,' tired parents
Americans spend almost half their food dollars -- $415 billion per year -- on meals and snacks away from home, according to a report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Division. That’s a 58% jump since the early 1990s.

And here’s a news flash: Food eaten away from home tends to be kind of salty and/or greasy. By contrast, says a study reported in the Archives of Family Medicine, home-cooked meals are associated with “healthful dietary intake patterns, including more fruits and vegetables, less fried food and soda, less saturated and trans fat, lower glycemic load, more fiber and micronutrients from food.”

I don’t think American parents are trying to murder their kids with burgers and fries. They may want to eschew fast food and chew healthier chow. But some live in "food deserts," areas without access to affordable, healthy ingredients. Poorer neighborhoods tend to have convenience stores rather than supermarkets, along with high numbers of fast-food restaurants.

Or it's 6 p.m. and exhausted parents are listening to kids clamor for meals that come with toys. According to Douglas Rushkoff’s book “Coercion: Why We Listen to What ‘They’ Say,” the average American kid can recognize the golden arches before age 2.

Family dining 101
A quick Internet search for “family dinner night” turns up lots of companies that want to help -- by selling you everything from prime steaks to weekly recipe subscriptions. Some also offer advice with their ads:

•    Make some dinners casual -- a cookout or an “indoor picnic.”
•    Let family members take turns picking favorite menus.
•    Have breakfast for dinner.
•    Get a slow cooker or pressure cooker.
•    Turn off phones and TVs, and insist that everyone stay at the table until the meal is over.

I found those last two pieces of advice extremely depressing, and the rest of it to be common sense. Then again, when I was a kid everyone we knew had family dinner night. Where else would you eat?

And yes, my mother worked full time, as did a lot of my friends’ mothers. Even so, meals out simply were not on the radar. Kids learned early how to help in the kitchen, and by age 11 or so we could put together meals like meat loaf, baked chicken, chili, beef stew and the like.

Why can't today’s children do the same? Or at least take part in meal prep with their parents: a fast stir-fry at 6 p.m., or weekend “batch cooking” of meals to be enjoyed during the week? Also, you’d be amazed how far slow-cooker recipes have come; imagine coming home at night to the aroma of rosemary crockpot chicken or turkey and bean cassoulet.

Eating at home will improve your family’s health, both now and in the long term. Little kids are now developing “adult” or type 2 diabetes, and youth obesity rates are soaring.

And hey, mom and dad: How are you feeling these days?

That’s what I thought. So move away from entrees eaten without forks and from boxes. Consider a vegetable that isn't a french-fried potato. Sure, it'll be a tough transition, but so would teaching your kids to inject themselves with insulin.

And please do turn off those cell phones. Mealtime talking should be done to people who are in the same room with you -- even if you need those cue cards to get the conversational ball rolling.

Comments

 

Family that eats together, Stays together!!!!

i cooked a meal every night when my children were growing up and we all sat down at the table together.  now, my grown children are doing the same with their kids.  

At least dinner every night together with as many family members as possible. On the weekeends I make it a point if the kids are around to fix a good lunch as well. It makes for more than good nutrition, it makes good families as well!

It really does not take that long to make a meal. And you can cook enough to have left overs the next day where you wouldnt need to cook again. Which means you only need to cook 3-4 times weekly.

And children love to cook or help. You can spend quality time with your family while teaching them basic cooking skills.

And most importantly you will feel better knowing that you have given your family and yourself a healthy meal. Everyone wins!!!

And just being at home instead of running around will give you peace and relaxation.

TRY IT.

There is NOTHING more important to give to yourself and family than good nutrition!!!

And there is no substitute for home cooked meals. And as a bonus; you have family time together...And children will be proud that they know how to cook and help out.

It really is more fun than work. Eating out is just a Bad Habit...

Your children will have less health problems and be a healthier weight!

All parents need for tools is a cookbook!  And to buy the ingredients...

Its a copout to make any excuse not to cook a meal. And its a fine line between abuse and neglect to let your children eat junk and call it a meal!!!

Everyone knows that its healthier to eat home cooked meals....

And if you have never made the effort; You can think of all kinds of reasons to not do it.

In reality; it doesnt take that long and it just the right thing to do. And it is NOT cheaper to eat out as some offbeat research tries to make it seem...

It is amazing how far a can of tuna or a peanut butter sandwhich or oatmeal can take you...

Great article....Taken a step further...What about controlling the environment in which your food is prepared.  How many times have you seen "top chefs" sweating over food, roaches in the kitchen, general filth.  Do you check with your local health inspection office to determine violations, etc?  I remember a story from NJ a few years ago...An asian restaurant owner was found to be using his own "special fluid" to season his food only after several folks developed herpes.  It is sad but true that most people would call 911 if they found the folks that cook their food rambling about in their front yards.      

I came from a pretty dysfunctional family in a lot of ways. But my parents were very traditional and we ate dinner at the kitchen table almost every night. We didn't always talk. Or if we did, the talk wasn't always pleasant. So, I'm envious of those who say family dinners are the best moments of their day. My husband and I have no kids and are urban dwellers whose work schedules aren't always conducive to cooking, so it's far too tempting to go out to eat much of the time. But, despite this, I strongly believe that eating at home one of the healthiest things you can do -- both physically and financially.  Yay for all of you who do make healthy dinners for your kids every night! You deserve a pat on the back!

Very good article, it is said “what you eat is what you become.” You will never know, how the food your eating out has been prepared or by whom. They might not like the job or might had bad day, feeling anger. Preparing food in that condition, thoughts injects into food that we eat outside.  Same food prepare by our parents with love care for family. Surely will raise health family members, and moral children’s .      

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):