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What’s For
Dinner?
The Food Nanny Comes to the Rescue!
DOWNLOAD A PDF WITH GRAPHICS
“What’s for dinner?” may be a clichéd phrase,
but it is still asked by thousands of people across the country
every day as they walk in the door, call in or text home on their
cell phone, or query via email. Busy families seem to find it a
chore to make decisions about what to eat every night. This often
leads to catch-as-catch-can grazing, ordering in or eating out. Yet
studies show over and over the positive impact of eating family
dinners together as often as possible.
Liz Edmunds, now known as The Food Nanny, wants
to bring more families home to dinner. As the mother of seven
children, she and her airline pilot husband were committed over the
years to keeping family dinnertime an every-night commitment. What
she learned from years of family dinners she now shares in The
Food Nanny Rescues Dinner: Easy Family Meals for Every Day of the
Week. (palmerpletsch.com/thefoodnannyrescuesdinner.htm, ©2008).
Advance planning, Edmunds found, was the key.
And to simplify the planning, Edmunds began by choosing a “theme”
for each night of the week to make menu planning easier. (e.g.
Tuesday=Italian, Saturday=Grill Night) What has worked for her (and
now her children’s families) for more than 30 years can work for
families everywhere.
“I must emphasize that ‘theme night’ does not
mean having a ‘party’ every night of the week at dinner,” Edmunds is
quick to explain. “The night’s ‘theme’ is merely the starting point
for deciding what to have for dinner.”
So if Wednesday is Hold the Meat, Edmunds
chooses something like Roast Salmon with Tarragon or Vegetable
Lasagna or perhaps Blueberry Croissant French Toast and builds the
rest of the meal around that. Then on Thursday, which for her is
Mexican Night, the options include Mexican Chicken and Black Bean
Soup or Texas-Style Beef Tacos. This fun, easy, consistent starting
point for meal planning is made easier by grouping her
tried-and-true and delicious recipes according to these themes in
The Food Nanny Rescues Dinner. The chapters on salads, breads, side
dishes and desserts let you fill out any meal.
The Food Nanny also shares tips to help cooks
get organized, equip the kitchen, supply the pantry, involve every
family member in the preparations, and forge family bonds around the
dinner table. She understands that life is hectic — especially when
you are raising a family. But, with her system of planning along
with her terrific collection of recipes, there is no reason not to
have a home-cooked meal on the table every night.
What about those people who say they don’t know
how to cook, or they’re not good at it? What if they don’t feel like
cooking or eating a big meal some night? Well, as far as Edmunds is
concerned, these are two of the common excuses for not cooking; she
has counter arguments for the 10 most common excuses, which she
convincingly offers in her chapter “Yes, But....”.
“Nothing makes us happier than the smells coming from the
kitchen enticing us with our favorite foods,” Edmunds states. “I
hope my approach helps you gather your family around the dinner
table where you can then start building family togetherness as
you enjoy good food and share ideas and concerns.”
About the Author
Liz Edmunds raised seven children with a
commitment to a consistent dinnertime with the family, despite her
husband’s extensive travels as an airline pilot. Her passion for the
importance of family dinnertime led a kitchen-store manager to dub
her “the food nanny,” and a business was born.
Today Liz serves as part teacher, part
counselor, part coach for families in need of organizational help
and cooking instruction so they can implement a weekly dinner plan
in their own homes. She also teaches cooking classes at Sur La Table
in Salt Lake City, focusing on food that is family- and
budget-friendly while also tasty and easy to make.
Their children now grown with families, Liz and
her husband, Stephen, live near Park City, Utah.
Meal Planning
“The key to effective meal planning is mapping
out your meal schedule a week or two in advance,” Edmunds explains.
Here’s what The Food Nanny suggests:
1. Choose your themes for each night of the
week. (You can start with what I have used, or choose your family’s
preferences.)
2. Get out a calendar.
3. Choose meals (using recipes from The Food
Nanny Rescues Dinner or your own recipe file).
4. Write down your chosen meals on the form
provided (in the book and at www.thefoodnanny.com),
or on a sheet of paper or index cards.
5. Check your food supplies and make a grocery
list of what you will need for the week’s menus.
6. Go Shopping.
Now with the decisions made and the supplies on
hand, making dinner each night becomes a no-brainer.
“There is hardly anything more lovingly bonding
in a family than mealtimes together with good home-cooked food, good
conversation, and good moods. The Food Nanny helps families make
these important family times yummy! I recommend this book for every
family — especially those who think they don’t have the time or
talent to cook great dishes.”
~ Dr. Laura
Schlessinger, International Radio Talk Host and author of “Stop
Whining Start Living”
The Food Nanny Rescues
Dinner
Easy Family Meals for Every Day of the
Week
by Liz Edmunds (“The Food Nanny”)
288 pages • 8" x 9.25" • 200+ recipes
220 color photos • 4 tables • Index • Four-color interior
$24.95 trade paperback • ISBN: 978-0-935278-77-4
Publication date: September 2008
Available at bookstores and cooking stores
nationally and online.
Published by Palmer/Pletsch Publishing; distributed by IPG
(Independent Publishers Group). Visit
www.thefoodnannyrescuesdinner.htm for more information. For more
tips and organizational help, go to thefoodnanny.com.
The author, Liz Edmunds, is available for interviews
and
media tour events.
To arrange an interview or for additional
information, please contact
Liz at liz@thefoodnanny.com
or call 801-897-4439.
Or contact Pati Palmer at 503-294-0696 or
patipalmer@aol.com
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