Kaleigh
Super_Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2004
- Messages
- 29,571
My son''s kindergarten teacher decided to have the kids cook a meal in class and gave each of them a small knife and it was left to us parents to show them how to hold the knives. No joke - a few of the kids *almost* cut part of their little chubby fingers.Date: 1/20/2010 2:44:11 PM
Author: elrohwen
Ooo, good thread! I''ve been watching that show too and I wonder how some of them have had so little experience with even things like using a knife. My mom would not have let me go to college without having at least the basics down.
The chances are really really small. It''s really only an issue when you have raw eggs all mixed together in large quantities - like you would if you were working in a factory or big bakery making cookies and needed large quantities of eggs. When you just have individual eggs that you''re cracking into your dough, the chances are pretty small (washing the shell off first makes it even smaller).Date: 1/20/2010 5:14:03 PM
Author: packrat
What are the chances of getting sick from the raw eggs..seriously? Could I put it in the fridge and eat off it for a couple days? Dang..if we hadn''t had an ice storm this am, I''d pile the kids in the truck and go get a box of mix.
Date: 1/20/2010 5:12:52 PM
Author: MC
My son''s kindergarten teacher decided to have the kids cook a meal in class and gave each of them a small knife and it was left to us parents to show them how to hold the knives. No joke - a few of the kids *almost* cut part of their little chubby fingers.Date: 1/20/2010 2:44:11 PM
Author: elrohwen
Ooo, good thread! I''ve been watching that show too and I wonder how some of them have had so little experience with even things like using a knife. My mom would not have let me go to college without having at least the basics down.
Both of my kids use only butter knives. The other day I tried to get my older son to use a real knife but he refused to. lol
Yeah, it was really odd especially since they were cutting potatoes! That was the only project with sharp objects. Actually, aside from that, the teacher was careful with what the kids did. However. . .one kid did take his class-required scissors and cut part of his sweatpants into little pieces. lolDate: 1/20/2010 5:25:13 PM
Author: elrohwen
Date: 1/20/2010 5:12:52 PM
Author: MC
My son''s kindergarten teacher decided to have the kids cook a meal in class and gave each of them a small knife and it was left to us parents to show them how to hold the knives. No joke - a few of the kids *almost* cut part of their little chubby fingers.
Both of my kids use only butter knives. The other day I tried to get my older son to use a real knife but he refused to. lol5 is probably a bit young to be using knives I think
Heck, I knew a kid in 7th grade who almost cut his finger off in home ec
Little kids should definitely stick to things like mixing. That teacher is crazy!![]()
Ah, we are kindred spirits radiantquest!Date: 1/20/2010 4:24:47 PM
Author: radiantquest
Hehe. I am pretty bad. Sometimes DH would get stuff that comes from a box so that I will feel useful. He bought tuna helper and I was in the kitchen feeling all wife-like and served it and he then informed me that I forgot the tuna and all I had served was creamy noodles. I was very embarrased.
The next time I was 'cooking' I was making a frozen pizza. I forgot to take the cardboard off the bottom. They should make it a little bit bigger so that you know that it is there.
There have also been many close calls when it comes to starting fires. I remember I was making those hash brown things. Of course from a bag that was frozen. The first time I made they were all mushy so this time I turned the fire up higher and the oil I guess was too hot so when I poured the hash brown chunks and I guess some ice dust there was a huge grease splatter with a loud frying noise, I squealed, he came running and yelled at me for a long time. I think I even cried.
I no longer cook. Ever.
Lol. The *real* purpose of safety scissors is so that kids can''t cut up their own clothing as easilyDate: 1/20/2010 5:33:34 PM
Author: MC
Yeah, it was really odd especially since they were cutting potatoes! That was the only project with sharp objects. Actually, aside from that, the teacher was careful with what the kids did. However. . .one kid did take his class-required scissors and cut part of his sweatpants into little pieces. lol
Haha that''s so cuteDate: 1/20/2010 5:03:29 PM
Author: elrohwen
Ok, now DH can kind of cook - he can make pasta, cook up some chicken breasts with veggies and rice, that type of thing. Left on his own he wouldn''t be eating cereal every night.
However, the other day he wanted to make tea (I always make it) and asked how I did it. So I said to fill the kettle, put it on the stove, and I''d show him how much milk and sugar I add once it was boiling. He literally takes a couple minutes setting the kettle up - putting on the lid, making sure the whistling thingy is down. He''s so helpless sometimes! He kept wanting me to get up and help, but I was doing something else and said he''d never learn if he didn''t figure it out for himselfHe kept claiming it was making funny noises?
It''s just boiling water in a kettle, how difficult can that be for a microelectronics engineer to figure out?![]()
Oh goodness, I thought he was semi-competent in the kitchen, but that incident made me realize that he''s totally not.
My son would have been up the creek.Date: 1/20/2010 5:37:03 PM
Author: elrohwen
Lol. The *real* purpose of safety scissors is so that kids can''t cut up their own clothing as easilyDate: 1/20/2010 5:33:34 PM
Author: MC
Yeah, it was really odd especially since they were cutting potatoes! That was the only project with sharp objects. Actually, aside from that, the teacher was careful with what the kids did. However. . .one kid did take his class-required scissors and cut part of his sweatpants into little pieces. lolIf that was my kid, I wouldn''t know whether to make him stop or just burst out laughing.![]()
Date: 1/20/2010 4:46:25 PM
Author: Hudson_Hawk
I could eat oatmeal cookie dough plain with my hands. I don''t even need a spoon!
Thank you, Kaleigh!Date: 1/20/2010 5:00:38 PM
Author: Kaleigh
Batter is the best, but haven''t had any in ages. But do slice up the Pillsbury Cookie dough... One slice is enough to fill my cravings!!!!Yummmm.![]()
Lauren,
Love your recipes!!!! Great job!!!
Awww that''s soooo cute!!!Date: 1/20/2010 9:55:28 PM
Author: LaurenThePartier
Thank you, Kaleigh!Date: 1/20/2010 5:00:38 PM
Author: Kaleigh
Batter is the best, but haven''t had any in ages. But do slice up the Pillsbury Cookie dough... One slice is enough to fill my cravings!!!!Yummmm.![]()
Lauren,
Love your recipes!!!! Great job!!!![]()
I''m making cookie dough (but, not the cookies) in honour of this thread tonight.![]()
Cutest story ever. Love that you and your Grandpa cooked together, what fond memories you must have!!! You should post those recipes!!!Date: 1/20/2010 10:13:18 PM
Author: Gypsy
Radiantquest and Laila, you guys are cracking me up. I have done a heinous thing to pizza. But it was homemade, including the crust, and the definition of ''just brick it'' was not explained to me (or rather the length of time that step lasts wasn''t) before I went ahead and did that step. It was charred.
I was ''cooking'' at 10, with supervision. I used to look up the recipes and pick one out. Go grocery shopping with my grandpa. Then I''d wash all the veggies and granpa would chop, and I would measure. Then I would read the recipe and be in charge of following it while grandpa did the actual cooking. I was allowed to stir and to taste things at every safe step.
You don''t have to leave your kids alone with boiling water. There is a lot of the cooking process that is safe for them-- finding recipes and shopping and washing ingredients and ''managing'' the recipe progress is all completely safe. As they get older and as you teach them kitchen safety they can add tasks until they are cooking on their own. Plus there are some recipes that never need a knife or boiling water. So they can start cooking those even sooner.
Haha, I did the same thing! Now I''m eating it for breakfastDate: 1/20/2010 9:55:28 PM
Author: LaurenThePartier
I''m making cookie dough (but, not the cookies) in honour of this thread tonight.![]()