It's only cultural conditioning that says we need to have sweet foods in the morning.
natural cookingfood and drinkcookinghealthy cookingnatural foodsrecipefood blogfood blogschef blogschef blogrecipesAlison Antonfoodkid's healthhealthy kidsfood for kidsbreakfastkid's allergiesrotating foodsbreakfast recipes for kidsporridgekid's smoothiealmond cream If you find it's too hard to rotate foods every morning, start with rotating the foods every four days.
The easiest breakfasts are yesterday's left-overs: Hearty soups with grains; hamburgers, turkey or soy patties scrambled with eggs and veggies; casseroles and even steamed vegetables from dinner last night make super weekday breakfasts in a hurry. Most kids are eating the same foods everyday for breakfast -- usually refined wheat products. This way, kids are getting a variety of foods each morning throughout the week. Yes... My concern is that kids are getting too much refined carbohydrate in the morning and not enough long-sustaining energy foods like protein and good fats.
There's also a concern for developing food allergies and intolerances. they're easy, they're quick, there's no clean up and they give a quick boost in energy. Here's an example:
Monday - Turkey sausage or scrambled eggs and hashed browns
Tuesday -
5-Grain Maple Mush Wednesday -
Shrek ShakeThursday - Meat, veggie or miso soup with brown rice
Friday -
Fresh Fruit with Almond Butter CreamSaturday - Low sugar boxed cereal (mixed with nut butter for protein and fat)
Sunday - Whole wheat pancakes with flaxseed
Try the rotating breakfast for a few weeks and ask the kids how they are doing in their morning classes. It's fine to serve boxed cereal or pancakes one or two times a week; the problems arise when the same foods are consumed every day.
The best way to address both these issues is with a rotating morning diet. Some kids will need more carbohydrate in the morning, others will fair better with more protein and fat. Small bodies aren't quite ready to tolerate the same foods each and every day, especially allergy-triggering foods like wheat, milk and sugar.
One of the biggest dietary problems I see for kids (and adults) in the modern world is the addiction to refined breakfasts: boxed cereal, pancakes, rolled oats, toast, even "health bars". How are the kids doing in math class when the quick energy drops hard?
Kids need carbs, there's no doubt about that. But what about an hour or two later?