30 Times Kids Showed Their “Logic” When It Came To Food, As Shared By Parents In This Twitter Thread
Interview With AuthorIt’s not until you become a parent that you realize just how much of an issue eating really is. You’re not dealing just with a partner who keeps asking “so what do you wanna eat” every night any longer—no, dear Pandas, now you’ve got a toddler who does weird stuff with their food and is pickier than the critic in Ratatouille.
Humor writer and editor Kristen Mulrooney started up a hilarious but bizarre thread on Twitter that perfectly fits the mood this Spooky Season(™). She shared that her 2-year-old daughter hides her apple cores in an undisclosed area. The only clue is the word ‘underneath’... and it raises a ton of questions.
Inspired by this oh-so-relatable tweet, other parents shared their own kids’ weird and unusual eating habits. Odds are that these might seem very bizarrely familiar to many of you reading this.
Scroll down for a good dose of quality humor and remember to upvote the tweets that you enjoyed the most! Got any peculiar food-related habits that you’d love to share with the rest of the class? What’s your working theory as to what happened to the apple cores in Kristen’s home? Drop by the comment section. (Just don’t slip on the apple cores on your way there.)
Bored Panda got in touch with Kristen, who was kind enough to answer our questions. We had a quick chat about writing quality humor, getting picky kids to try food they don't want to, and mused about the Mystery of the Missing Apple Cores.
More info: Twitter | Instagram | KristenMulrooney.com
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Kristen, the author of the viral Twitter thread, shared her thoughts about quality, humorous content.
"I'm an editor for humor publication The Belladonna and I always tell our writers that the secret to quality humor is being super specific and super universal at the same time," she noted that relatability is key.
"I think that's especially true for tweets. If you can paint the funny scene, that's great, but it really takes off when people can relate to it and have their own funny scene they're eager to share, too."
Forget the smell. Didn‘t they ever clean underneath their bed no matter what?
Load More Replies...I did this with my vitamins when I was little. Threw them in the fireplace. Unfortunately we never used the fireplace and when we moved my mom found them all.
Wow, did you not realize just how lucky you were to get vitamins growing up? I never got the chance to take vitamins when I was a kid and I was always jealous of the kids who did because I always felt like they were guaranteed to be in better health and my parents could barely afford their own medication, let alone vitamins for me, so I'm kinda wounded that you got to have something I would've loved to have had growing up but just... threw them away.
Load More Replies...Didn't say she horded them, only hid. Maybe it was temporary until she could throw them out and she this for years.
I used to spoon mashed potatoes into my knee socks. I’m sure my mother found them when she did the wash. She never told on me
I'm with you hate onions to this day fed them to my dog under the table she sat by my feet waiting for anything I didn't like
I hated taking the multivitamins my mom gave me so I’d stick them in my pocket. Then during class in 7th grade I was sneaking Skittles out of my pocket to eat and accidentally grabbed and chomped into the multivitamin. Worst taste ever!!! Ran and spit it into the garbage. Teacher was laughing so hard he didn’t get mad, which was saying something. He was always mad.
Get the concept of flushing them down the toilet and never occurred to you.
My hubby's grandma had dementia and once when we visited her for lunch, the nurse just stuck a mouthful of food in her mouth and walked away. When she was sure the nurse wasn't looking she spit it out onto her spoon and then stirred it into her tea. She then looked at me and went "shhhhh". I laughed so hard. Hubby didn't even notice what happened, which made it all the more funny.
According to Kristen, 'bribing' one's kids is one of the main ways how parents can convince their kids to try eating something new. Another powerful tactic is making things playful.
"My three kids take some convincing with vegetables, but they'll fall for the 'you're a dinosaur and this broccoli is a tree' bit every time," she told Bored Panda.
"Asparagus is an easy one because I can turn it into a science experiment. They'll shovel asparagus into their mouths after I tell them it makes your pee smell funny."
As for the apple cores that led to the genesis of the Twitter thread itself, Kristen believes her pooch may have gotten to them.
"I suspect that my dog solved the mystery of the missing apple cores before I did. I hope that's what's going on. I haven't seen a single fruit fly around the house, so fingers crossed," she said.
Based in a small town near Boston, Kristen is the winner of the 2022 Erma Bombeck Humorist-in-Residence program. Meanwhile, her writing has been featured in The New Yorker, McSweeney’s, House Beautiful, The Weekly Humorist, Popular Science, and elsewhere.
What’s more, she’s also an editor and contributor at The Belladonna, a satire and humor site. Kristen is also a published writer, having co-written the bestseller Gilmore Girls: The Official Cookbook. Her writing also appears in the humor anthology, Embrace the Merciless Joy: The McSweeney’s Internet Tendency Guide to Rearing Small, Medium, and Large Children.
I remember in my early 20's I had a couple of girlfriends that lived with each other. They were known to be downright slobs most of the time. One night I went over for a girls night and of course there was a huge stack of unrinsed dishes in their sink. I couldn't stand it and started handwashing them just to get rid of the smell. They felt bad and came over to help me by rinsing and drying and such but when I got to the bottom of the stack there was some sort of glob of food that I have no clue what it started out as. I gagged like a maniac, and as I went to try and used the sponge to push it down the drain I swear I think this thing had somehow transformed into some sort of entity of its own. It jiggled back at me angrily like it was attacking the sponge. I screamed ran into the bathroom and told those girls I was not coming back out until the killed the sink monster!
Humorist Kristen’s tweets are hi-la-ri-ous. If you enjoyed this thread, then you’ll probably like her other posts as well. Obviously, you’ll find the freshest comments on her Twitter account. However, if you want to read the best of the best, she shares them on her Instagram.
It’s incredibly relatable humor (especially what she noted about drinking more water), and we spent the better part of the morning laughing.
What Kristen and all the other parents on Twitter are getting at is that, when it comes to food, things are way more difficult than they ought to be. Whether we’re talking about hiding scraps or avoiding eating their veggies like it's bedtime. Yours truly was an incredibly picky eater who'd avoid practically everything during the day and would wake up at midnight to eat chicken drumsticks in the dark.
awww, a mold farm in your car just for you! how thoughtful 🥰🥰
When I was little my parents had friends over for dinner. My mom served liver pâté. I hated it so I rolled mine up in a ball and threw it under the dining room table. Next thing you know, the visiting wife tells my parents, “Uh oh, looks like your dog pooped under the table.” We didn’t have a dog. Small dark ball is retrieved from under the table. My mom examines it and says, “This is liver pâté.” All the adults look at me. Pâté is put back on my plate. Parents made me eat it. Moral of the story: kids pants have pockets for a reason.
A while back, Bored Panda had a lovely chat with pie artist Jessica Leigh Clark Bojin about picky eaters and what parents can do to get their children to at least try new dishes. Creativity (and a smidgen of bribery when that does) goes a long way.
“My mum was occasionally successful in getting us to eat things we didn’t like by hiding the ingredients in other more innocuous foods. I refused to eat eggs in any form as a child. But I loved French toast, and never questioned the suspiciously-thick omelet-like covering on my syrup-drenched toast (I didn’t know that French toast involved eggs!),” Jessica shared her thoughts with Bored Panda during an interview, previously.
My sister hates peas (and mashed potatoes). As a kid, she'd sneak her peas off her plate, either to under the rim of her plate or by tossing them into a planter near the dining table.
“She would also trick us by telling us the food we were served was actually a different dish—one that she knew we tolerated. For example, my brother and I hated salmon but loved tuna fish. It never struck us as odd that sometimes we were served ‘pink tuna fish’ because it turned out we were actually totally fine with salmon, we just didn’t like the idea of salmon for some reason,” the baking and cooking expert told us.
“Of course, when we were in our late teens our mum eventually fessed up and let us know that we had been eating eggs and salmon for decades and we might as well accept the fact that we like them now!” Jessica said.
This is totally something my kid would have done, especially the part about the remote controlls. He's been squirreling those away since he was old enough to understand what they do.
Most governments recommend keeping a small supply of non-perishable food on hand for emergency situations. C’mon mom.
Those little boxes of raisins that were perfect for lunch boxes. My sister was asked not to include them in my nephews lunch anymore because he insisted on eating them one at a time and he usually hadn’t finished them before the end of lunchtime. The number of habits he’s picked up from me is incredible!
Alas, not every ingredient can be disguised as something else or hidden in mashed potatoes. Besides, kids are pretty insightful: some of them quickly catch on that you’re trying to broaden their palates. Though it’s not just kids who are wary of new dishes. Grown-ups have plenty of food-related hangups, too.
“I am ashamed to admit it, but I didn’t try a shocking number of different foods until I was in my late teens,” pie artist Jessica told Bored Panda that she barely ate any “vegetable that wasn’t a carrot.” Things changed as she grew older, though.
I, you? Hot dog, apple cores? The f**k is happening in this story?
This young lady may have some unresolved “I NEED A BANANA FOR SCALE” issues.
“It wasn’t until I was invited to my first boyfriend’s home for dinner that it occurred to me that it might be time to broaden my culinary horizons. His mother frequently cooked ‘weird’ (not actually weird at all, but new to me) foods that I had always assumed I hated,” she said.
“But out of a desire to not offend her, I, for the first time in my life, ate the hated foods… and it turned out I liked them! Societal pressure trumps parental tricks, threats, and bribery every time,” the food expert joked.
Reading this brought back memories of oranges in my school backpack that went in orange and came out a mouldy green mess at term end
My daughter was around 3 and staying at my MIL's for the day. My BIL lived with her and kept an eye on my daughter while my MIL went grocery shopping. He noticed she was frequently walking behind a chair in the living room. She was riding a toy tow truck around most of the time (foot powered). He waited until she was out of the room and found a bunch of candy wrappers behind the chair. My MIL kept the candy dish on a shelf on the china cupboard and pushed it all the way to the back so she couldn't reach it on her own. BIL told her he had to go to the bathroom and to be good for a couple of minutes. He snuck down the hall and spied on her. She took the tow truck over to the cupboard, stood on the tow truck seat and used the grab hook to snag the bowl. After taking a piece, she used another tool to push it back to its original position. If she'd thrown the wrappers in the garbage she might not have gotten caught.
Meanwhile, recently, comedy writer Ariane Sherine explained to Bored Panda that the secret behind an impactful tweet or social media comment is making the post “short and snappy.”
She added that most people on Twitter “are lovely” and that creators attract the types of followers that match their content. "I find you get back what you put out—post negative tweets, you attract negative people, and the same is true of positive tweets."
I once found an old lunchbox that fell into an airshaft outside when I was like 8, over 10 years later. The sandwich that had once been in there had turned into earth in the meantime - it didn't even smell bad or anything, just earth.
I never hid food as a kid, had no clue this was a thing… but perhaps is the youngest of 5 kids total my parents had just given up on trying to force me to eat things I didn’t want to eat
Neither did I. I was more likely to try to nick food when my Mum wasn't in the room. I probably WOULD have hidden turnip and swede if I could have found a way to it. (Grew up with post war rationing)
Load More Replies...I had friends visiting with their 3 year old. My back garden is very secure so we let him run around outside while we sat and gossiped. He came back chewing on something white and told his mum he really liked the garden sprinkles...the day before, I'd been making pea and ham soup and had boiled up a big ham hock, basically half a pig leg. Once it was cooked, I peeled off all the boiled skin and fat, sliced it up and left it out for my garden birds. He'd been eating small cubes of boiled pigskin and fat that had been left out on the lawn overnight. No ill effects thankfully, but I've now got a proper bird feeding station to stop feral kids attacking the food...
WHY???????????????????????? The skin is the very best part of pork/ham. Full of good nutrition and delicious!
Load More Replies...Makes me appreciate my 6 year old. "I'll eat it, mommy, but I don't want to." And this gem, "It's not great, but it's okay." Lol
One of my kids randomly hid food and wrappers even as he got older. We found cheese on top of a freezer only he can reach without a stool. We've found various food and candy wrappers under his mattress. I once found half an apple between two bookcases. It's like he's part squirrel.
I hated salami sandwiches and on at least three occasions, hid Tupperware containers under my bed just to not eat them. My mum was not impressed.
Kids, Mommy wants everyone to play a game called “Where is That Smell Coming From?” The first one to figure it out gets a prize!
My best friend at elementary school hid her uneaten sandwiches under the snow in the school yard all our first winter (in 80s Germany we had snowy winters). Then the snow thawed. In high school one student threw their bags with their sandwiches out a second floor school window. Most of them got stuck in the crown of a tree next to the school.
I have to say I don't understand hiding away unwanted food. No parent wants to spend needless money, so just say you don't like it and we all move on. I know kids are naive, but parents need to explain that concept and they'll get it.
At a large family gathering many years ago, I was seated at the kids table which was my grandparents foldable, portable camping table. It had a small drawer for flatware which I used to dispose of my cole slaw.
The bottom of my full length locker in grade 8 (age 13). I think it had been there all year. I've never seen what started as a normal thickness sandwich so flat. It was, of course, moldy and quite colourful (I lament I don't have pictures) but so perfectly flat. Let's just say it started its sandwich existence at about 2.5cm(1in). It was about 3mm (1/8in) when I rediscovered the square petri dish.
Not a parent, but me When I was in second grade, I absolutely DESPISED beef meatloaf and pork (still do hate the meatloaf). I didn't like eating it, so I would ask to go to the bathroom and shove a huge bite of the meat into my mouth. (My mother always told me to take a bite before I go idk why tbh it's a bit weird). I would then head in, and spit the meat into the toilet. I would then wait for like 2 minutes, (usually messing around with the drawer contents) then leave like nothing happened. My parents caught on after a few weeks.
A couple of us in high school were talking about our weird food habits when we were little. One girl told us she hated bananas, but her mom put one in her lunch every day. For some reason she couldn't explain to us, instead of throwing the bananas out at school, she'd bring them home in her backpack and throw them onto the roof of her house. She wasn't busted until her parents had to hire someone to clean the jammed-up gutters.
My sister had some boxes in storage from when she finished college and moved back in with my Dad. She decided to reduce some of the items in there and went through the boxes. She comes across an unopened package of Mission brand flour tortillas. They were perfectly fine, no mold or discoloration....AND THEY WERE 10 YEARS PAST THEIR EXPIRATION DATE!!! I've never been able to bring myself to buy that brand anymore.
My family never ate together, so I could get rid of unwanted food easily. Or so I thought. The garbage in the basement didn't get emptied as often as the rest of the house (I was the only one using it). I wasn't completely picky so I didn't get rid of food often. But one day apparently my dad, with his uber sensitive nose, needed to investigate where a strange smell was coming from, lifted the bag from the can and it ripped open instantly, spilling everywhere. I was not a smart teenager and was only saved from being in massive trouble because I had a bad day at school that day that sent me home crying. I was informed however that I wasn't allowed to eat downstairs in the rec room anymore.
i will steal my brother's candy and hide it in my lego house. i forgot that never eat stolen candy in front of the person you stole it from.
Parents had to hide food from me when I was a kid: I had a habit of extra snacking. Mind you I wasn't ever a fat child, I had a very high metabolism and went outdoors a lot (did played video games too). The reason became clear when I became the tallest sibling of the family. I would sneak anything that wasn't sealed, even found a hole of a locked cabinet. Climbed to the highest to grab snacks that I know are there. My favorite things were just rolled up meat slices with mustard in them (weird meat wraps), honey on saltines, and sliced apples with salt on them. Edit: I also am not picky tbh. Ate anything they gave me. There is an exception of grapes. Hated the big ones, but ate smaller ones. I still don't like them as an adult. lol
I once found an old lunchbox that fell into an airshaft outside when I was like 8, over 10 years later. The sandwich that had once been in there had turned into earth in the meantime - it didn't even smell bad or anything, just earth.
I never hid food as a kid, had no clue this was a thing… but perhaps is the youngest of 5 kids total my parents had just given up on trying to force me to eat things I didn’t want to eat
Neither did I. I was more likely to try to nick food when my Mum wasn't in the room. I probably WOULD have hidden turnip and swede if I could have found a way to it. (Grew up with post war rationing)
Load More Replies...I had friends visiting with their 3 year old. My back garden is very secure so we let him run around outside while we sat and gossiped. He came back chewing on something white and told his mum he really liked the garden sprinkles...the day before, I'd been making pea and ham soup and had boiled up a big ham hock, basically half a pig leg. Once it was cooked, I peeled off all the boiled skin and fat, sliced it up and left it out for my garden birds. He'd been eating small cubes of boiled pigskin and fat that had been left out on the lawn overnight. No ill effects thankfully, but I've now got a proper bird feeding station to stop feral kids attacking the food...
WHY???????????????????????? The skin is the very best part of pork/ham. Full of good nutrition and delicious!
Load More Replies...Makes me appreciate my 6 year old. "I'll eat it, mommy, but I don't want to." And this gem, "It's not great, but it's okay." Lol
One of my kids randomly hid food and wrappers even as he got older. We found cheese on top of a freezer only he can reach without a stool. We've found various food and candy wrappers under his mattress. I once found half an apple between two bookcases. It's like he's part squirrel.
I hated salami sandwiches and on at least three occasions, hid Tupperware containers under my bed just to not eat them. My mum was not impressed.
Kids, Mommy wants everyone to play a game called “Where is That Smell Coming From?” The first one to figure it out gets a prize!
My best friend at elementary school hid her uneaten sandwiches under the snow in the school yard all our first winter (in 80s Germany we had snowy winters). Then the snow thawed. In high school one student threw their bags with their sandwiches out a second floor school window. Most of them got stuck in the crown of a tree next to the school.
I have to say I don't understand hiding away unwanted food. No parent wants to spend needless money, so just say you don't like it and we all move on. I know kids are naive, but parents need to explain that concept and they'll get it.
At a large family gathering many years ago, I was seated at the kids table which was my grandparents foldable, portable camping table. It had a small drawer for flatware which I used to dispose of my cole slaw.
The bottom of my full length locker in grade 8 (age 13). I think it had been there all year. I've never seen what started as a normal thickness sandwich so flat. It was, of course, moldy and quite colourful (I lament I don't have pictures) but so perfectly flat. Let's just say it started its sandwich existence at about 2.5cm(1in). It was about 3mm (1/8in) when I rediscovered the square petri dish.
Not a parent, but me When I was in second grade, I absolutely DESPISED beef meatloaf and pork (still do hate the meatloaf). I didn't like eating it, so I would ask to go to the bathroom and shove a huge bite of the meat into my mouth. (My mother always told me to take a bite before I go idk why tbh it's a bit weird). I would then head in, and spit the meat into the toilet. I would then wait for like 2 minutes, (usually messing around with the drawer contents) then leave like nothing happened. My parents caught on after a few weeks.
A couple of us in high school were talking about our weird food habits when we were little. One girl told us she hated bananas, but her mom put one in her lunch every day. For some reason she couldn't explain to us, instead of throwing the bananas out at school, she'd bring them home in her backpack and throw them onto the roof of her house. She wasn't busted until her parents had to hire someone to clean the jammed-up gutters.
My sister had some boxes in storage from when she finished college and moved back in with my Dad. She decided to reduce some of the items in there and went through the boxes. She comes across an unopened package of Mission brand flour tortillas. They were perfectly fine, no mold or discoloration....AND THEY WERE 10 YEARS PAST THEIR EXPIRATION DATE!!! I've never been able to bring myself to buy that brand anymore.
My family never ate together, so I could get rid of unwanted food easily. Or so I thought. The garbage in the basement didn't get emptied as often as the rest of the house (I was the only one using it). I wasn't completely picky so I didn't get rid of food often. But one day apparently my dad, with his uber sensitive nose, needed to investigate where a strange smell was coming from, lifted the bag from the can and it ripped open instantly, spilling everywhere. I was not a smart teenager and was only saved from being in massive trouble because I had a bad day at school that day that sent me home crying. I was informed however that I wasn't allowed to eat downstairs in the rec room anymore.
i will steal my brother's candy and hide it in my lego house. i forgot that never eat stolen candy in front of the person you stole it from.
Parents had to hide food from me when I was a kid: I had a habit of extra snacking. Mind you I wasn't ever a fat child, I had a very high metabolism and went outdoors a lot (did played video games too). The reason became clear when I became the tallest sibling of the family. I would sneak anything that wasn't sealed, even found a hole of a locked cabinet. Climbed to the highest to grab snacks that I know are there. My favorite things were just rolled up meat slices with mustard in them (weird meat wraps), honey on saltines, and sliced apples with salt on them. Edit: I also am not picky tbh. Ate anything they gave me. There is an exception of grapes. Hated the big ones, but ate smaller ones. I still don't like them as an adult. lol