It seems that most of the bentos are geared towards adults and so many of them look delicious and beautiful. But since I'm making bentos for my fussy little girl I can only look, admire and learn. For now I'll be sticking to Maisie friendly foods but hopefully one day I'll be making more diverse bentos. Thanks for taking a look and for voting.
Friday, August 29, 2008
Cast your vote...Please!
So voting has begun over at Not Exactly Bento's competition and as I mentioned in an earlier post, I submitted two of Maisie's bentos. So here I am begging asking you to go check out all the entries and cast your votes. If you happen to fall head-over-heels in love with Maisie's which are bento entries #52 & #53, I would sure love and appreciate your vote!! According to the rules you may vote for up to three of your favorites by leaving a comment with the bento entry numbers (#52 & #53) of your choice in the post linked ~~>HERE<~~ and just a reminder, in case you missed it or I forgot to mention it earlier, Maisie's bentos are #52 & #53!!
It seems that most of the bentos are geared towards adults and so many of them look delicious and beautiful. But since I'm making bentos for my fussy little girl I can only look, admire and learn. For now I'll be sticking to Maisie friendly foods but hopefully one day I'll be making more diverse bentos. Thanks for taking a look and for voting.
It seems that most of the bentos are geared towards adults and so many of them look delicious and beautiful. But since I'm making bentos for my fussy little girl I can only look, admire and learn. For now I'll be sticking to Maisie friendly foods but hopefully one day I'll be making more diverse bentos. Thanks for taking a look and for voting.
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Bento #34
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Bento #33
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Bento #32
Today was Maisie's first day back at school and thankfully she had a wonderful day. This is a new bento box for her and she loves it. Her bento included quail eggs on a nest of udon noodles with medium-sweet soy sauce, sesame oil and sesame seeds, a slice of kamaboko, chicken and vegetable dumplings, grapes and Florecitas.
The grapes, half of the kamaboko and a few Florecitas went uneaten from this bento.
Monday, August 25, 2008
Bento #31
No bento for Maisie today as we had plans to meet up with friends for some playtime and then lunch out at one of my favorite lunch places This is Eammon's bento made from leftovers from last night's dinner. Rendang chicken curry on Jasmin rice. Trail mix, dragon fruit and dried mixed fruit.
Friday, August 22, 2008
Bento #30
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Another contest
Not to be deterred by my no joy showing in my first submission to a bento contest, I have now entered my second bento contest this time over at Not Exactly Bento. I was allowed two submissions so I entered bento #27 and bento #28. Once the voting begins I'll be back begging for your vote!! Please wish me luck!
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Bento #29
Maisie *LOVES* Thomas so I bought her some new Thomas bento boxes and supplies.
Percy & Thomas Dark Chocolate Dreams on wheat bread. Auto Land biscuits, two bite brownie & dried cherries.
I used shimmer dust with a dry paint brush and stencil to make the Percy and Thomas designs on the sandwiches.
Maisie ate every bite of this bento.
Percy & Thomas Dark Chocolate Dreams on wheat bread. Auto Land biscuits, two bite brownie & dried cherries.
I used shimmer dust with a dry paint brush and stencil to make the Percy and Thomas designs on the sandwiches.
Maisie ate every bite of this bento.
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Bento #28
Beef ravioli, steamed broccoli, nuts & raisins and yet another two bite brownie.
Maisie has decided that she likes peanuts, almonds and cashews and thinks of them as a big treat. I have also found that because the beef in ravioli is so finely ground and there's not too much in there, Maisie's decided that she likes them and hey, it allows me to get some meat into her, yeah!
A couple of the ravioli went uneaten from this bento.
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Bento #27
This was lunch by request. Maisie said she wanted chocolate circles and chocolate brownie. I did convince her to add some dried cherries, pineapple and papaya.
The two bite brownies that have been in Maisie's lunch for the past number of days are not home made. I have made them in the past using a silicon mini-muffin pan but I find them a pain to make so I generally just purchase them.
The two bite brownies that have been in Maisie's lunch for the past number of days are not home made. I have made them in the past using a silicon mini-muffin pan but I find them a pain to make so I generally just purchase them.
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Monday, August 11, 2008
Bento #25
White Chocolate Wonderful on wheat octopus, dried cherries, two bite brownie, carrots, Laughing Cow cheese.
Friday, August 8, 2008
Bento #24
Coconut curry pasta with chicken & avocado, Hello Kitty carrot flowers, dried kiwi, pineapple, apple & cherries, two bite brownie.
I made the pasta for dinner last night and surprisingly Maisie really loved it, so much so that she ate not only the pasta but the avocado and chicken too!! Who knows, this may be the start of a whole new eating pattern for Maisie...oh let's hope! To see my cutie-patootie Little Miss Maisie posing next the her bento, click here.
Thursday, August 7, 2008
Bento #23
Dark Chocolate Dreams on wheat pinwheels, dried apples and pineapple, two bite brownie, sesame rice crackers.
Many people asked where to buy the gadget to make the fancy egg yolks in this post, well thanks to 3lilangels, here's a link if you're interested in purchasing one.
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
Bento goes Italian
Monday, August 4, 2008
Just ducky
Saturday, August 2, 2008
Questions answered
Thank you everyone for all your wonderful and inspiring comments and for all your questions too. I've been having so much fun packing bentos each day and trying to think up cute new ideas to pack basically the same meals over and over again. I'm trying to expand Maisie's food likes with only limited success. Also, when I look at other bento blogs for inspiration, the base for most bentos is rice and Maisie doesn't eat rice except for a very small amount that I sneak into her inari. So all the wonderful cute rice molds and such that are out there, I can't use for her lunches. I try not to get cutsie with Eammon's bentos so I'm out of luck there too with the rice molds but hopefully someday, Maisie will have cute rice shapes in her bento.
On to the questions. The most prevalent question, asked by numerous people was: "Where do you get your supplies?"
Unfortunately, I have yet to find a store locally that sells bento items so I've had to do my shopping online, buying most of my bento items though Ichiban Kan. They are by far the least expensive place to buy lunch boxes, lunch box belts, lunch bags, cute little food picks, egg molds, food dividers, food cups, sauce bottles, mayo cups, rice molds and seaweed punches. All the items are $1.00 - $1.50 each but the base shipping charge is high so get everything you want in one order to make the shipping charge worth the cost. I've also purchased a couple of items off ebay but those are quite a bit more expensive so I'd suggest waiting until you see if you like making bentos before investing lots of money.
Almost all of my silicon cups are from my cabinets from when I used to do a lot of baking. They are all Wilton brand and work great. I used to pick those up at JoAnn Fabrics, Michaels or Hobby Lobby always using the 40% off Sunday paper coupon, making them really quite inexpensive. For the cut-out foods I use cookie and canape cutters that I dug out from the dark recesses of my cabinets. The egg molds also make good cutters, if you look at the bottom of each you'll see that you can use them as cutters for a slice of bread or a couple deli slices of meat. Then if you take say the top piece of sandwich bread and press it into the egg mold, you get a really good impression for the top of each sandwich. Since I started making bentos, I've tried looking at things around the house in different ways and I've been surprised how many things can be used to make cute bentos, even a juice glass can be used to to cut an everyday sandwich into a fun round sandwich.
Ozimum asked: "What is Bento, is it the box or the food?"
It's my understanding that bento means a packed meal, usually lunch. If I have this wrong, someone please let me know.
Catherine asked: "Is there a special marker that you've purchased to draw on the food?"
In the pictures below, I drew the faces on the egg mice and the moggie & doggie using Wilton Foodwriters. The faces on both the octopus and the smiley eggs were made with nori. I have some nori/paper punches that I use and then I just place the punched out pieces on the food which is slightly damp and it stays on. All you scrap book people probably have many punches that could be used to make all sorts of fun bentos.
Caroline and Rebecca asked: "So how do you make the really cute carrot flowers?"
I use this vegetable slicer to get the carrots to a good and even thickness, then I have this Hello Kitty set which includes a cutter that makes the little flowers. All the "scraps" remaining after cutting out the flowers I chop up and add to whatever I'm making the next day so there isn't a lot of waste.
Quail eggs??
it's really difficult to get protein into Maisie but she loves eggs and small food so quail eggs are a great thing. I've purchased at the local Asian market both fresh and canned quail eggs and she likes them the same so I always keep a few cans in the house. She can down 6 eggs in one sitting and she'll eat them warm or cold. If you boil the canned ones (which are already cooked and peeled in water), the yolk gets nice and creamy, they're really nice. They taste like chicken eggs but just a wee bit more delicate in flavor.
Catherine also asked: "Just curious, in one of your pics the yolk of the eggs was in different shapes. Are those created when you take warm boiled eggs and put them into the egg shapers?"
Making egg yolks different shapes is achieved by using a gadget where you have to separate the white from the yolk, then you have to put the whites into special forms where you insert a tube that is the shape that you want the yolk. You cook the white then remove the tube shape and put the raw yolk in the void, cover and cook again. It's very easy but it takes about 20-25 minutes of boiling time to make the eggs. The end result is sweet though!! Also, I've made the egg white part and then stuffed the shaped void with deviled egg salad, then sliced to make fun appetizers. 3lilangels said "Wow, the eggs are beautiful. Saw the egg maker on ebay and thought that was too intricate and time consuming to make. Really salute your patience." I just did a search on ebay and couldn't find this item but it could come up for sale again if anyone is interested.
The Hello Kitty imprints on the carrots were made using the Hello Kitty Vegetable Cutter Set which I've also used to make small sandwiches.
Amy asked: "How long is the preparation? It must be a time consuming labor of love :-)"
It really isn't as time consuming as you would think. I now have all my boxes, cutters and supplies well organized so that makes choosing what I want to use quite easy. As I'm making dinner I prepare Maisie's bento and many times her bento is leftovers. Making the imprints on the veggies, cutting out shaped sandwiches or punching nori takes just a few moments but organization is the key. When making dinner, I make an extra serving as Eammon's bento is always a repeat of the previous nights dinner. Then it's just arranging it in the box and I'm done. Many bento makers choose to prepare their bentos in the morning as it's fresher but I'm too lazy to do it that way and since Maisie and Eammon have never had their bento made fresh in the morning, they don't know any better so they're just going to have to get what they get!
Maryellen asked: "Can you recommend a Bento book?"
Unfortunately I've never read a bento book or even seen one in person. I did see mentioned on some blog (sorry, don't remember which) a book called 'Face Food: The Visual Creativity of Japanese Bento Boxes' and the person liked the book. I look at the cover picture and it scares me as it looks way, w.a.y. beyond anything that I do or ever plan to do but it might make an interesting coffee table book! There are a lot of bento blogs out there and scrolling though them can give you plenty of ideas on how to pack bento for your family.
Lisa asked: "What is inari??"
Inari is vinegared rice in a bag of fried and seasoned tofu. I buy already prepared seasoned tofu at my local Asian market, it can be found vacuum sealed in both the frozen and refrigerated sections. All three of us love the tofu so I use it all the time making up my own variations from filling the pouch with egg or chicken salad to rice, fish (raw or cooked) and veggies. Sometimes I serve the pouch closed and flat with very little filling the way Maisie likes it and other times it is heavily stuffed, open on the top, the bottom of the bag filled with rice and the open top big and pretty with fish, chicken, egg and/or veggies exposed.
Adrienne in TX (LID 4-20-07) asked: "Please include some how to's as well. I made some cute carrot cut outs today, thanks to your carrot flowers."
Adrienne I'm glad that I've inspired you. I've included some how-to tips in this post and if there are any other tips you want, please leave a comment or email. Most of the time I'm lucky to get a picture and description up but would be happy to give more information anytime someone asks.
Thanks again for all your interest and questions. If you have more, please send them along and I'll do my best to answer them in a somewhat timely manner.
On to the questions. The most prevalent question, asked by numerous people was: "Where do you get your supplies?"
Unfortunately, I have yet to find a store locally that sells bento items so I've had to do my shopping online, buying most of my bento items though Ichiban Kan. They are by far the least expensive place to buy lunch boxes, lunch box belts, lunch bags, cute little food picks, egg molds, food dividers, food cups, sauce bottles, mayo cups, rice molds and seaweed punches. All the items are $1.00 - $1.50 each but the base shipping charge is high so get everything you want in one order to make the shipping charge worth the cost. I've also purchased a couple of items off ebay but those are quite a bit more expensive so I'd suggest waiting until you see if you like making bentos before investing lots of money.
Almost all of my silicon cups are from my cabinets from when I used to do a lot of baking. They are all Wilton brand and work great. I used to pick those up at JoAnn Fabrics, Michaels or Hobby Lobby always using the 40% off Sunday paper coupon, making them really quite inexpensive. For the cut-out foods I use cookie and canape cutters that I dug out from the dark recesses of my cabinets. The egg molds also make good cutters, if you look at the bottom of each you'll see that you can use them as cutters for a slice of bread or a couple deli slices of meat. Then if you take say the top piece of sandwich bread and press it into the egg mold, you get a really good impression for the top of each sandwich. Since I started making bentos, I've tried looking at things around the house in different ways and I've been surprised how many things can be used to make cute bentos, even a juice glass can be used to to cut an everyday sandwich into a fun round sandwich.
Ozimum asked: "What is Bento, is it the box or the food?"
It's my understanding that bento means a packed meal, usually lunch. If I have this wrong, someone please let me know.
Catherine asked: "Is there a special marker that you've purchased to draw on the food?"
In the pictures below, I drew the faces on the egg mice and the moggie & doggie using Wilton Foodwriters. The faces on both the octopus and the smiley eggs were made with nori. I have some nori/paper punches that I use and then I just place the punched out pieces on the food which is slightly damp and it stays on. All you scrap book people probably have many punches that could be used to make all sorts of fun bentos.
Caroline and Rebecca asked: "So how do you make the really cute carrot flowers?"
I use this vegetable slicer to get the carrots to a good and even thickness, then I have this Hello Kitty set which includes a cutter that makes the little flowers. All the "scraps" remaining after cutting out the flowers I chop up and add to whatever I'm making the next day so there isn't a lot of waste.
Quail eggs??
it's really difficult to get protein into Maisie but she loves eggs and small food so quail eggs are a great thing. I've purchased at the local Asian market both fresh and canned quail eggs and she likes them the same so I always keep a few cans in the house. She can down 6 eggs in one sitting and she'll eat them warm or cold. If you boil the canned ones (which are already cooked and peeled in water), the yolk gets nice and creamy, they're really nice. They taste like chicken eggs but just a wee bit more delicate in flavor.
Catherine also asked: "Just curious, in one of your pics the yolk of the eggs was in different shapes. Are those created when you take warm boiled eggs and put them into the egg shapers?"
Making egg yolks different shapes is achieved by using a gadget where you have to separate the white from the yolk, then you have to put the whites into special forms where you insert a tube that is the shape that you want the yolk. You cook the white then remove the tube shape and put the raw yolk in the void, cover and cook again. It's very easy but it takes about 20-25 minutes of boiling time to make the eggs. The end result is sweet though!! Also, I've made the egg white part and then stuffed the shaped void with deviled egg salad, then sliced to make fun appetizers. 3lilangels said "Wow, the eggs are beautiful. Saw the egg maker on ebay and thought that was too intricate and time consuming to make. Really salute your patience." I just did a search on ebay and couldn't find this item but it could come up for sale again if anyone is interested.
The Hello Kitty imprints on the carrots were made using the Hello Kitty Vegetable Cutter Set which I've also used to make small sandwiches.
Amy asked: "How long is the preparation? It must be a time consuming labor of love :-)"
It really isn't as time consuming as you would think. I now have all my boxes, cutters and supplies well organized so that makes choosing what I want to use quite easy. As I'm making dinner I prepare Maisie's bento and many times her bento is leftovers. Making the imprints on the veggies, cutting out shaped sandwiches or punching nori takes just a few moments but organization is the key. When making dinner, I make an extra serving as Eammon's bento is always a repeat of the previous nights dinner. Then it's just arranging it in the box and I'm done. Many bento makers choose to prepare their bentos in the morning as it's fresher but I'm too lazy to do it that way and since Maisie and Eammon have never had their bento made fresh in the morning, they don't know any better so they're just going to have to get what they get!
Maryellen asked: "Can you recommend a Bento book?"
Unfortunately I've never read a bento book or even seen one in person. I did see mentioned on some blog (sorry, don't remember which) a book called 'Face Food: The Visual Creativity of Japanese Bento Boxes' and the person liked the book. I look at the cover picture and it scares me as it looks way, w.a.y. beyond anything that I do or ever plan to do but it might make an interesting coffee table book! There are a lot of bento blogs out there and scrolling though them can give you plenty of ideas on how to pack bento for your family.
Lisa asked: "What is inari??"
Inari is vinegared rice in a bag of fried and seasoned tofu. I buy already prepared seasoned tofu at my local Asian market, it can be found vacuum sealed in both the frozen and refrigerated sections. All three of us love the tofu so I use it all the time making up my own variations from filling the pouch with egg or chicken salad to rice, fish (raw or cooked) and veggies. Sometimes I serve the pouch closed and flat with very little filling the way Maisie likes it and other times it is heavily stuffed, open on the top, the bottom of the bag filled with rice and the open top big and pretty with fish, chicken, egg and/or veggies exposed.
Adrienne in TX (LID 4-20-07) asked: "Please include some how to's as well. I made some cute carrot cut outs today, thanks to your carrot flowers."
Adrienne I'm glad that I've inspired you. I've included some how-to tips in this post and if there are any other tips you want, please leave a comment or email. Most of the time I'm lucky to get a picture and description up but would be happy to give more information anytime someone asks.
Thanks again for all your interest and questions. If you have more, please send them along and I'll do my best to answer them in a somewhat timely manner.
Friday, August 1, 2008
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