Day 126.
I believe that commercials aimed at our children should be banned, particularly food commercials. I mean, Tony the Tiger: is he really going to come play soccer with my daughter if she eats his Grrrrrrrreat Frosted Flakes junk? No. Is Chuck E. Cheese really as awesome as its commercials make it out to be? Where a kid can be a kid? No. Where a kid can be a kid is in the backyard of his home, frolicking freely and using his imagination. Respect the pouch? What on Earth does Capri Sun mean by that high-quality bit of advertising? Respect it! How about that one where the Kool Aid man beats out the Soda man in the ballpark? As if Kool Aid is the healthier of the two? A full cup of sugar goes into those 8 servings of "fun!" Every glass is 1/8th of a cup of sugar! Who are they kidding? And then there's the McDonald's commercials that depict a mom gazing lovingly at her adorable, healthy weight child, who's not clamoring to be done with the fake food and go play on the playground that smells like sweaty feet.
In a country where childhood obesity is all too common, what are we doing allowing these products to influence our children? And make no mistake: they do influence our children.
Back to the breakfast table: What is this "complete breakfast" that sugary cereals claim to be a part of? Generally, there's a brief picture showing us that the complete breakfast includes fruit, milk, juice, toast (usually buttered), and their sugary cereal. So the cereal is what? The dessert? I don't know about you, but I don't make a habit of serving dessert at breakfast. You?
I suppose cereals have their place in our lives. Just yesterday, I was eating a bowl of Honey Nut Clusters...for a snack. I did find myself curiously eying the flakes and wondering what they were at one time. I think we should always be able to recognize what we're eating. I'm not sure what I ate last night. I do buy cereals every now and again. Sometimes, even the sugary ones. But a complete breakfast they are not.
Strawberry pancakes with butter and honey drizzled on top, served with extra strawberries and a glass of milk on the side. Now there's a complete breakfast. You have carbs and fats and protein. And the pancakes will keep you fuller longer than the sugary cereal. Plus, they're very tasty.
Strawberry Pancakes
Makes about 12 pancakes
What You Need:
- 2 cups flour
- 2 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/4 tsp sea salt
- 2 Tbsp sugar
- 2 eggs, lightly beaten
- 2 Tbsp melted butter
- 1 1/2 cups milk
- 12 fresh strawberries, cut into thin rounds
- Heat your griddle or pan to medium-high heat.
- Combine flour, baking powder, salt, and sugar. In a separate bowl, beat eggs with butter and milk.
- Add wet ingredients to dry, stirring just until combined.
- Drop by 1/4 cupfuls onto the hot skillet. Place sliced berries on top of each pancake. When the top side bubbles up, flip the pancakes and cook for another minute or two. Transfer to serving plate.
Michelle these pancakes look fantastic! I have had strawberry pancakes before, but nothing that ever looked like these! The slices of strawberries are beautiful in them! YUM.. hope you saved some, I'm heading your way for breakfast!! :)
ReplyDeleteWow these are the prettiest pancakes ever!! I love the strawberry slices in each one. Beautiful!!!!
ReplyDeleteAdvertising aimed at kids is horrible stuff. I've kept my 3 yr old away from 'commercial' TV so she's not as influenced.
now if they showed these pancakes on kids commercials I'd be a lot happier :)
These pancakes look mouthwatering!
ReplyDeleteI could not agree more about advertising to kids. How low can you go? I read somewhere once that Ronald McDonald is only second to Santa Claus as the most recognizable "character" in the world. SAD.
And now even PBS shows are loaded with Chuck E. Cheese and McD commercials. Is there nothing sacred? :(
those look delicious!
ReplyDeleteand i couldn't agree with you more about the advertising. we generally watch pbs which does have chuck e cheese, but my son doesn't "get it" yet.we've gone once...but i saw the commercial for soda/kool aid and thought "well that's not any better..."
i was feeding my sons fruit loops recently, but the box has lasted us a while and i feel bad that they even like them! usually we stick to cheerios, rice krispies, etc
WOW! Danny and I both agree (while cooking your "Black Beans and Yellow Rice with an Egg") that this looks SO DELICIOUS!
ReplyDeleteThanks everyone. They were delicious. This is a good tip for any fruited pancake: don't add the fruit to the batter. Add it to individual pancakes after you've poured the batter on the griddle. It keeps them at the surface and it looks nice. The color bleeding is minimalized as well.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the recipe! I just made them and while my 20 month old is the only one awake, he ate them up! :)
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