We made pizza last week
Here too. I used the home made naan bread as a pizza base and DS chopped cherry toms, mushrooms etc for the toppings.
We do eggs here. I made sure I have a wet wash cloth ready for if/when he dips his finger into it but mostly he does follow the instruction not to touch. We've made eggy bread several times and a few days back scrambled egg although he only ate one mouthful of that. He rarely eats eggs but the eggy bread has been a big hit recently so we keep making it to get a bit of protein into him.
We made a pudding last week. It was an adaptation of a German apple pudding, we used bananas and blackberries instead of apples as I had so many and the bananas had ripened beyond the point that any of us likes to eat them. I think it's possibly the ugliest pudding you could serve up, but tasty! Nana and DP were raving over it (nice with some icecream!) and DS had a huge portion. It's nice for DS the following day just served cold too so none of the fruit went to waste. Nana was amazed DS had made it and been telling all the relatives! The proud grandmother!
Cheese sandwich has been a big hit here. Sandwiches are often looked at with suspicion by DS but when he made it himself (grated the cheese, spread butter and mayo, snipped spring onion, chopped toms and cut sandwich in half) he ate the lot with great enthusiasm.
He's also made his supper veg a few times, peeling carrot and chopping into batons, then dumping into the steamer, snapping asparagus, and mangetout just gets dumped in as it is. he was saying and showing me 'snap, snap' with the asparagus when he was eating it so the idea of doing the cooking certainly had an impact.
Unfortunately he got a bit wild (prob OS, and tired by that point) when washing up and I had to take him from the kitchen. Bit of a foot stamp tantrum over that but it wasn't safe to have him stood up on a chair grabbing all sorts, going wild. I have of course opened a can of worms letting him stand on a chair at the work surface because the thought had never occurred to him before and now he knows he can get at anything.
All in all going well here.
Katy, I haven't had a chance to look at the site you posted yet but I'm with the rest of you that boys need house skills too. Who wants to marry a man who doesn't vac, cook, wash dishes and do the laundry? besides, teenagers need all these skills when you kick them out of the house to fend for themselves
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