Used to have lunchables, I remember the Taco Bell ones fondly.
I was actually just thinking about the chicken fajita one recently! Definitely wasn't bad, would probably eat again. There was one version that was Lemony Snicket themed to coincide with the 2004 movie adaptation, complete with a 4 part short story.
Used to have lunchables, I remember the Taco Bell ones fondly.
I was actually just thinking about the chicken fajita one recently! Definitely wasn't bad, would probably eat again. There was one version that was Lemony Snicket themed to coincide with the 2004 movie adaptation, complete with a 4 part short story.
I was actually just thinking about the chicken fajita one recently! Definitely wasn't bad, would probably eat again. There was one version that was Lemony Snicket themed to coincide with the 2004 movie adaptation, complete with a 4 part short story.
These are the ones I had:
Not sure if its youth nostalgia blinding me, but I recall both my aforementioned chicken fajita one AND that Taco Bell nacho one as both being pretty good LOL.
Used to have lunchables, I remember the Taco Bell ones fondly.
I was actually just thinking about the chicken fajita one recently! Definitely wasn't bad, would probably eat again. There was one version that was Lemony Snicket themed to coincide with the 2004 movie adaptation, complete with a 4 part short story.
I was actually just thinking about the chicken fajita one recently! Definitely wasn't bad, would probably eat again. There was one version that was Lemony Snicket themed to coincide with the 2004 movie adaptation, complete with a 4 part short story.
- Blue's Clues Revital (pictures I could find from IA - missing freezer pops: drive.google.com/drive/folders/1FGEA7jTr0oQhMUEByh5LnjjF5lHltIwe?usp=share_link ) - bread with butter and hagelslag/chocoladevlokken - Cheese Nips - Cheetos (regular ones, first time I tried the spicy ones it gave me a stomachache) - Chubby banana flavour soda - Cream of Wheat - Dora the Explorer Campbell's soup - Frankfurter/hotdog - Fruit flavour snacks (lots of cartoon ones) - Goldfish crackers - Guyanese "Chinese" cake - Kinder Milkchocolate - Kinder Verrassingsei (either while visiting family or from shops that smuggled them across the pond) - Life cereal - M&M's - miso soup - New York style pizza - Pedialyte - rice cakes - Scooby-Doo Keebler graham crackers - Shoestring chips/fries - soft icecream - speculaas - stroopwafels - Trader Joe's chocolate cats and toucans cookies - Twizzlers (only strawberry) - Yogos
Growing up I stayed a lot with my grandparents while my parents worked and grandma was not much of a cook. So when I wasn't at school or at home my childhood lunchtimes were pretty much lived on PB and J, Kids Cuisine, Happy Meals and probably the most different was Lunchables. Lunchables in the 2000s were wild, the Mega Lunchables actually use to contained caffeinated pops/sodas, they had breakfast Lunchables like pancakes, cinnamon rolls, waffles that had candy in them, and just plan dessert Lunchables. My mom would have a fit when I would come home particular after eating the Mega ones with the pop in them as I would be bouncing off the walls, I don't think they had caffeinated beverages were in them for very long. I remember about the time they were getting popular my elementary school had put up a sign saying children weren't allowed to bring pop into the cafeteria as it created an obvious giant mess if we brought a pop they would swap it out for a milk and let us have it at the end of the day. I know a lot of schools had that policy so that pretty much would have killed that as most children would take there Lunchables to school.
My dad gave me Coca-Cola often when I was around 3 or 4 years old (as an adult I wonder why a parent would do that? Especially since I had behaviours associated with ADHD and the medication that was in my nebuliser supposedly had a side effect of hyperactivity). Also most of the American breakfast cereals are filled with sugar...
Growing up I stayed a lot with my grandparents while my parents worked and grandma was not much of a cook. So when I wasn't at school or at home my childhood lunchtimes were pretty much lived on PB and J, Kids Cuisine, Happy Meals and probably the most different was Lunchables. Lunchables in the 2000s were wild, the Mega Lunchables actually use to contained caffeinated pops/sodas, they had breakfast Lunchables like pancakes, cinnamon rolls, waffles that had candy in them, and just plan dessert Lunchables. My mom would have a fit when I would come home particular after eating the Mega ones with the pop in them as I would be bouncing off the walls, I don't think they had caffeinated beverages were in them for very long. I remember about the time they were getting popular my elementary school had put up a sign saying children weren't allowed to bring pop into the cafeteria as it created an obvious giant mess if we brought a pop they would swap it out for a milk and let us have it at the end of the day. I know a lot of schools had that policy so that pretty much would have killed that as most children would take there Lunchables to school.
My dad gave me Coca-Cola often when I was around 3 or 4 years old (as an adult I wonder why a parent would do that? Especially since I had behaviours associated with ADHD and the medication that was in my nebuliser supposedly had a side effect of hyperactivity). Also most of the American breakfast cereals are filled with sugar...
I vaguely remember them having soda, I was able to get away with having the soda(which was actually RC Cola as they won the contract)without it getting confiscated.
Growing up I stayed a lot with my grandparents while my parents worked and grandma was not much of a cook. So when I wasn't at school or at home my childhood lunchtimes were pretty much lived on PB and J, Kids Cuisine, Happy Meals and probably the most different was Lunchables. Lunchables in the 2000s were wild, the Mega Lunchables actually use to contained caffeinated pops/sodas, they had breakfast Lunchables like pancakes, cinnamon rolls, waffles that had candy in them, and just plan dessert Lunchables. My mom would have a fit when I would come home particular after eating the Mega ones with the pop in them as I would be bouncing off the walls, I don't think they had caffeinated beverages were in them for very long. I remember about the time they were getting popular my elementary school had put up a sign saying children weren't allowed to bring pop into the cafeteria as it created an obvious giant mess if we brought a pop they would swap it out for a milk and let us have it at the end of the day. I know a lot of schools had that policy so that pretty much would have killed that as most children would take there Lunchables to school.
My dad gave me Coca-Cola often when I was around 3 or 4 years old (as an adult I wonder why a parent would do that? Especially since I had behaviours associated with ADHD and the medication that was in my nebuliser supposedly had a side effect of hyperactivity). Also most of the American breakfast cereals are filled with sugar...
I have a very early memory of someone giving me an orange soda when I was about 2. I remember hating it and trying to dump it out in the trash.
Growing up, my parents mostly got caffeine free sodas. I honestly thought I wasn’t allowed to drink Coca-Cola as a kid. I was at a party when I was 8 and my mom thought it was odd that I won’t drink the soda because it was Coca-Cola. I won’t even say I was a hyper kid, if anything I was sort of sluggish. As an adult I ended up with chronic fatigue.
Post by cheesypizza2000 on May 15, 2024 19:48:29 GMT
When I was very young I only liked miso soup and edamame at Japanese restaurants but when I was about 12 I became addicted to sushi (not the Americanised rolls). Around the same age I also took a liking for Chipotle burritos. Since my dad liked to get me Dutch snacks I'm surprised he never made me bitterballen. Last time I got to visit my relatives, I devoured a frikandel speciaal and frieten met saus. While I'm away I like to get the Kinder Surprise since they're so difficult to get back home (for those who don't know, Kinder Surprise is banned in the US. There are shops that manage to smuggle them but they risk getting fined. There is the Kinder Joy that is FDA compliant but it's not the same)
Growing up I stayed a lot with my grandparents while my parents worked and grandma was not much of a cook. So when I wasn't at school or at home my childhood lunchtimes were pretty much lived on PB and J, Kids Cuisine, Happy Meals and probably the most different was Lunchables. Lunchables in the 2000s were wild, the Mega Lunchables actually use to contained caffeinated pops/sodas, they had breakfast Lunchables like pancakes, cinnamon rolls, waffles that had candy in them, and just plan dessert Lunchables. My mom would have a fit when I would come home particular after eating the Mega ones with the pop in them as I would be bouncing off the walls, I don't think they had caffeinated beverages were in them for very long. I remember about the time they were getting popular my elementary school had put up a sign saying children weren't allowed to bring pop into the cafeteria as it created an obvious giant mess if we brought a pop they would swap it out for a milk and let us have it at the end of the day. I know a lot of schools had that policy so that pretty much would have killed that as most children would take there Lunchables to school.
My dad gave me Coca-Cola often when I was around 3 or 4 years old (as an adult I wonder why a parent would do that? Especially since I had behaviours associated with ADHD and the medication that was in my nebuliser supposedly had a side effect of hyperactivity). Also most of the American breakfast cereals are filled with sugar...
Unfortunately, at least in the states, the anti-fat craze and corporate food corruption of the 80s and especially 90s hit really hard. And it REALLY did convince a lot of parents that breakfast cereals were "healthy," possibly due to the low fat contents and supposed "nutrients." As healthy as my parents were, they bought cereal well into my adult years.