Archive for the ‘lunch’ Category

Do you put fruit in bentos ?

Friday, July 16th, 2010

When you are making a bento box, how do you decide what to put in it? Is it what colors complete the picture you are making, or is it more of a nutrition selection? For me its those but its more what will get eaten and won’t end up mashed up before lunchtime.

My lunch eater loves fruit of all kinds - pineapple, grapes, blackberries, raspberries, bananas, apples, pears, etc. Almost any fruit that is sweet is on the favorite list. The problem is that many of those fruits don’t travel well. Bananas easily get squished, and berries end up in a paste as often as not. There are two fairly easy solutions to these problems - jelly, and containers.

If you have fruit that is very squish-able, such as grapes, you can always mix up an agar-agar jelly with the fruit, grapes in this case, inside the jelly. This will keep the fruit from rolling all over, and cushion it from any potential impact. Plus its way cooler to eat fruit that’s in jelly than just fruit by itself! It also lets you add another color to the bento to go for that rainbow of color, or possibly bring the fruit in line with your selected monotone theme.

The container is another possible solution. Fruit gets squished when it rolls around, or when its not packed in a hard container. If you get a good bento box, and use hard dividers as well as foil or paper cups to help keep foods separated and secure - your squish ratio will drop to nothing. I often use paper muffin cups because they are disposable and often fruit won’t leak through if its whole. If you need a waterproof solution, try either foil cups or silicon cups - both of which should be recycled.

Fruit and veggies are an important part of bento, and you should not leave out fruit just because it sometimes get squished. Do a little extra work and it will go the distance, just like the rest of the food!

Making lunches in the real world

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

All the talk you want about bento this and cute that doesn’t matter in the end. It all comes down to does the person eat the lunch.
My oldest daughter just started going to school, and taking her lunch.
Every day I do my best to send a healthy meal, and some things for snacks. And every day about half of it comes home. At first I was depressed, but now I’m taking it in stride.
It turns out her school is providing snacks! That is a very good reason why she’s not eating all her packed lunch.
My ego took a bit of a beating, but its recovered now. ;-)

Is soup worth the effort?

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

On a cold winter day, who doesn’t enjoy a nice hot bowl of soup? But the question is, how much trouble is it to add soup to bento, and is it worth it?

Bento foods are generally healthy, tasty, and most of all fairly dry. Any sauces that go with the dishes are generally left off so the food doesn’t get soggy before you eat it. Soup is the complete opposite of this mindset.

When you add soup to a bento lunch, you need to have a thermos or other special soup container. It needs to be well insulated to keep the soup hot until you eat it. The container must also have a tight sealing lid so the soup doesn’t spill out. These containers are generally easy to find, but can be quite expensive for a quality unit. If you don’t buy quality, you may experience cracks in your lid or insulation lining which require you to throw out the old unit and buy a new one.

Preparing good soup can be very time consuming, sometimes more so than a typical bento. For example if you are making homemade chicken noodle soup, you need to thaw and prepare, and cut up each of the chicken, carrots, celery, and any other ingredients you add. Then you need time to let it all simmer and the flavors mingle. The end result is totally awesome, but the time to get there can be the showstopper on a busy morning.

The most important question is - how do your lunch-eaters like the soup you send? That is always the important question with any lunch. If the person doesn’t like it or eat it, there is no point sending it. My response has generally been an enthusiastic one. I”m not sure if its all because of the quality of the soup, or more because its a rare treat and special.

In my eyes, if you have the time to make good soup it is always worth it. However, if you don’t make soup very often or you use store bought soup, it might not be worth investing in an expensive soup container to start with.

Stay tuned for the next article as we go from soup to nuts. (This blog has got everything, man!)

Bento #46 - Ribfest-licious!

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

I live in Ottawa, Canada. Towards the end of June every year is the International Chicken and Rib Fest where cooks from the US and Canada come to have a cook-off. The food that they make actually got me back in love with ribs because they have so much meat on them, they are tender, and very tasty. Enough background, on to the bento!

Today’s bento is 2 paper cups of BBQ pulled pork, a foil cup with 2 dill gherkins and 2 dill mini onions, and about 6 Shanghai bok choy. To this I added a package of instant ramen noodles. To eat I cooked the noodles, then topped them with the bok choy, and BBQ pork.

If you want to make the BBQ pork at home, simply get a small pork roast and cook it on low in a slow cooker. When its falling apart, drain the water, and cover with your favorite BBQ sauce. Let it cook more on low, stirring it every 10 minutes. When you are happy with the look and the beautiful smell, its done! (it was cooked after the water was drained actually, this last part is just to add flavor!)

The Shanghai bok choy is easy and tasty. I prepared about 6 large bunches. Cut the base of the leaves off the stem, trim the base of the stalks, and slice in half lengthwise. If the base of the stems are thick, cut pieces off them to help it cook faster. Boil a small pot of water. Add the bok choy when water is boiling. Also add a good dash of garlic powder, and at least 1 tbsp of soy sauce. Cook until the bok choy is soft to your preference. Drain, and serve. It will keep some of the garlic and soy sauce flavor to blend with its natural and slightly bitter flavor - very yummy!

If you think this lunch will be too dry for you, add a pat of  butter and  a dash of soy sauce on the ramen noodles before adding the other toppings.

[picture to be uploaded shortly...]