Posts Tagged ‘fruit’

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!

Bento for Beginners - where to start

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

I’ve heard many people say that they love all these pretty lunches, but they don’t know where to start. I too was like that at first, and even from time to time I still get overwhelmed.
Its best to start simple, and stick with what you know. If you make sandwiches for lunch now, why not simply get a large fun cookie cutter and make the sandwiches into fun shapes, say a puppy? Then you can use something (ketchup, mustard, soya sauce, etc) to “paint” the features on the puppy.
If you put fruit and veggies in lunches now, why not try some fancy shapes? A little extra cutting and you could have flowers, surf boards, a forest, or whatever you can dream up. Snow peas are great leaves. Slivered green beans are awesome grass. Even a slice of apple with the skin on could be a beach ball!
When you are starting out, keep it simple. your lunch-eaters will appreciate these changes even if they seem small to you. And if you keep it fun, you will stay with it, instead of getting disappointed or burned out. Bento is fun - both to eat and to make!