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Lutero Chaloux

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Jun 28, 2024, 8:41:20 PM6/28/24
to filatutho

Riccardo and Sofia say their standard preferred breakfast is cereal and milk. Many Italian children also enjoy cereal and milk for breakfast, but perhaps the majority of kids have cookies and cake or crostata (jam tart) which they dip in milk.
This is in keeping with what most adult Italian have for breakfast: a coffee or cappuccino, and some kind of a sweet treat usually eaten at the coffee bar standing up.
Whereas Italians are vigilant about sitting down to both lunch and dinner, this doesn't carry through to breakfast. Some of the cereals I love most (as Riccardo and Sofia's American grandmother), are those that are impossible to find in Italy: plain Cheerios, and plain shredded wheat. Shredded wheat simply doesn't exist in Italy and although you can find Cheerios, it's only the sugar coated variety. Riccardo and Sofia both love plain Special K, and Rice Krispies.
Riccardo shared that there is now a coffee product, a coffee for kids. It's actually espresso machine pods made from barley which used to be the substitute coffee beverage during the second world war. Apparently coffee product companies are marketing this coffee for kids probably as a way to draw Italian children into the Italian coffee culture.

Riccardo and Sofia, and almost every Italian child and adult, will tell you that lunch has to include pasta. As Riccardo says, maybe it's not pasta but lasagna, and as we know that's simply baked pasta.

Occasionally rice is served, but the bottom line is the lunchtime meal always includes a starch-based primo or first course. Italian kids generally choose simpler pasta sauces, like sugo, which is a tomato-based red sauce, or in bianco which is a Parmesan cheese based white sauce.
Sofia loves her pasta!

When rice is served, particularly at school, sauces are generally the same: tomato based red sauce, or Parmesan cheese based white sauce. Pesto is another sauce alternative.
Children are then served the secondo, or second course. It's usually some kind of meat or fish, and then a contorno - side dish - of vegetables: peas, potatoes, zucchini, broccoli, etc.
Vegetables are always a challenge for children, and children's palates evolve over time. Many Italians have an orto or garden, and frequently go to produce markets with their family, which increases children's exposure to different kinds of fresh and seasonal produce.
We have a garden and have always involved our grandchildren in the gardening process. Riccardo is now eight, but ever since he was a little boy, he's helped out in the garden as many Italian children do.

In Italy what age do kids start school?
In Italy kids start elementary/Primary school at 6 years old, which means La Principessa will start this coming September. Jillian: Italian Scuola Materna (kindergarten) starts at 3 years old

What do your kids eat for breakfast?
I always try to have a cake or some muffins made for breakfast, but often my kids prefer to eat bread with butter and jam or cereal with fruit. There is always freshly squeezed orange juice on the table and La Principessa has discovered that a good omelet in the morning is fantastic!


Do your kids eat lunch at school or at home? What is a typical lunch they would eat?
On long days the kids usually eat in the cafeteria at school, but sometimes they prefer to come home for a quick bite to eat. The menu is varied, it could be a pasta, meat with vegetables and sometimes even a salad with many ingredients or a sandwich. The oldest loves to go a restaurant for Chinese, Japanese or even a kebab. Incredibily enough we eat very little pizza!

What do you eat for dinner and at what time?
We usually have dinner between 7 and 7:30pm. During the summer vacation usually a bit later. For the menu it varies a lot. Luckily I have a husband who loves to cook and always surprises us with delicious dinners.

What time do your kids go to bed?
During the school year the lights have to be out between 8 and 8:30pm. During the vacation this is much more lenient (though not for our little gnome who always collapses early!).

What do you do as a family on the week-ends?
If we can we like to pass our time with friends. They come to our house for a meal or we go to their houses. Here in Italy socializing really revolves around food! If we manage, we also go to our house in the countryside to spend time with the paternal grandparents.

What is an average summer vacation for your family?
We try and take our kids to the sea for at least three weeks every summer. They also do a few day camps and then the last month we stay at our house in the countryside. While there we always try and find a few days to go and discover a new city or place.

Here is the menu from Anthem in March 2018. Our kids 9&11 ate for $10 each. We did not pay ahead for them when we reserved online. They were just added on at the end. Also, our waiter allowed my daughter to order off the main adult menu and they just made it into a kids size portion.

Jamie's on Mariner is fixed. I am booked to sail Mariner in August and it shows up as $35pp on the cruise planner. I am assuming it will be pretty much the same as the rest of them. The price is the same. We did Jamie's on Harmony and Anthem and the menus were almost identical. There might have just been one or two entrees that were different.

Thanks for the updates; I will see if they offer any onboard deals, maybe we will go. Was hoping for Giovanni's as that was a standout, but this can be good too. If I pre-purchase there is no service charge, if I buy onboard their may be a discount but then they add the charge back; I find it pretty much is a "wash" on pricing. Kid will be FREE so maybe just wait and see how we feel at the time.

This game requires 2-14 players. There should be two teams with the same amount of children on each side. One side are the cops that protect a treasure. The opposite side are robbers who attempt to steal the treasure. The object of this game is for the robbers to pretend they have the treasure while the cops run after them.

Once the cops tag or catch a robber, they are required to take that person back to the police base. A base can be any object, such as a fence, tree or building. The robbers have their own version of a base where they are safe from the police.

If one of the free robbers are capable of sneaking into the police base, that robber is allowed to free other robbers. Once all of the robbers are arrested, the police win the game. If the robbers rescue one another without getting captured, they become the winners.

Then the wolf names a fruit. If one of the kids are the fruit that was just called, then he/she must break free from the wolf without getting caught. If the kid gets caught, he/she becomes the wolf. If the wolf is not able to catch the fruit, the child remains the wolf.

The object of this game is for a child to become a witch, who chases after other kids in order to freeze tag them. Once a child becomes frozen (at least three times) he/she becomes the witch. The rules of the game? The witch is forbidden to stand close to the players to freeze them.

The octopus is only allowed to move horizontally to tag the other participants. Once a child has been tagged, he/she becomes frozen and is now demoted to a baby octopus. The baby octopi is only allowed to swing his/her arms to catch other players. When all of the kids have been captured, the first child that was captured now is now the new octopus.


When you visit E. 48th St. Market, you have found the premier location in the Atlanta area for Italian Specialty Foods. This family-run authentic Italian neighborhood grocery is located in the heart of Dunwoody. The aromas of freshly baked Italian breads, aged cheeses, spices, freshly brewed coffee and family recipe sauces are but a few of the Italian specialty foods that stir the appetite and delight patrons both new and old alike.

We are contemplating a first trip as a family to Europe next summer. My children will be ages 5 and 7. I have thought a little bit about more traditional itinerary such as London Spain or France, but want to do something that I have never done. Plus, we are coming from Florida and we would be interested in a little cooler weather in June or July 2020.

I am wondering if anyone has done a trip starting in Venice then visiting Lake Como, and then extending into Switzerland (Berner Oberland or Lucerne). Considering flying into Venice and out of Zurich. I have been to Venice before and I think my children would love it, but I am not sure if The Lakes and/or Switzerland are appropriate for kids their age since I have never been to either. We are "outdoorsy" and love hiking moderate trails and eating good food. Any advice would be appreciated!

You should somewhere on Lake Como ( or Lago Maggiore, depending on your route) on your way to Switzerland, but save most of your time for the Alps. In addition to the Berner Oberland, I suggest the car-free village of Bettmeralp, perched high above the Rhine Valley. It would be right on your way to the Berner Oberland if you go the MIlan-Brig-Spiez route, with a stop at Lago Maggiore ( Stresa).

I suggest Bettmeralp because it is very Family-friendly, and offers a range of easy ( lift-assisted) hikes in beautiful scenery, including the huge Aletschgletscher. ( I will find web photos and post). And then there is the Seilpark ( ropes course) which was a HUGE hit with my 6-year-old twin grandchildren last summer.

Note that they take children as young as 4 on the children's course. The "adult supervision" means you are on the ground near them, not alongside. With helmets and harnesses to clip in, it is very safe. It was fun to watch the grandchildren and the Swiss kids help each other with their cables.

There is a lake above town where they can swim, and also a sports center with a pool for rainy days. The last weekend of July they have a Seefest ( lake festival) with food booths and music bynthenlake. It was lots of fun to see and hear.

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