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Eating out With Toddlers: A Primer

Before A. and I had the kids, we loved eating out. It was one of our favorite things to do together, and we always did it a little more often and little better than we could really afford, but it never felt like money wasted. We'd spend lazy Saturday mornings drinking bottomless cups of coffee and stuffing ourselves with omelettes at various breakfast joints, have drinks and appetizers in the middle of the afternoon in the midst of long, leisurely rambles through Boston or Cambridge. Occasionally, we'd splurge on a nice dinner at a place where the waiters are annoying ("what we've done is we've taken a filet of salmon, we've rubbed it with saffron, then dragged it through a vat of roasted, pulverized almonds, then nailed it to the wall and thrown little snails at it...") but the food is so-o-o-o good.

 

When the girls were teeny tiny newborns, and basically all they did was sleep, we went out a few times with them in their infant seats and ate normal meals, like normal adults. Those days, needless to say, are long gone. We've tried to go out with them a few times more recently, and I'm sorry to say that it's really not that pleasant. In fact, generally, I would not recommend dining out with twin toddlers. But if you are foolhardy enough to attempt it, you might find the following tips helpful:

 

1. Bring food. Forget about this notion of waiting to "order" food because it's a "restaurant." Once you get your kiddos in a highchair, and assuming it's near a mealtime, they're gonna want to eat. So bring a snack and a sippy cup to hold them over until your order arrives. Or ask the restaurant to bring you some bread, stat. No, forget that; it takes too long. Bring your own.

 

2. Bring toys, too. Or books, if that's what they're into. Basically anything they can hold onto before and after eating so they won't reach for the knives / Sweet and Low packets / wine glasses / your plate / etc. (Of course, they will anyway). In a pinch, spoons make pretty good toys, as do paper napkins.

 

3. Go at an off-peak time. Everyone will have a better time if the restaurant you go to is not crowded, so you don't feel rushed and there are fewer other customers for your children to annoy. And by off-peak, I mean really off-peak. We made the mistake of going out this past Sunday morning to our neighborhood breakfast hotspot at around 9:00, thinking that we'd beat the hungover college crowd, but instead, we hit the older people and families with young kids crowd (duh). We felt stressed out the whole time. At one point Alastair looked across the table at me and said "This sucks!" A better strategy might have been tip #4.

 

4. Go to a mediocre restaurant. It's less likely to be crowded, and let's face it: it's not like you're going to have an exquisite gustatory experience when you're moving knives and glasses and coffee cups out of reach of your children with one hand and shoveling food into your own face with another. Also, your child will prefer whatever you're having to whatever you've ordered for them, so you won't get to eat much of it anyway. If we'd gone to the cavernous, dimly-lit breakfast place across town staffed by surly Eastern European women instead of the aforementioned breakfast hot spot, we might not have gotten fresh fruit on our plates, but we might have actually enjoyed ourselves.

 

5. Don't do it. Just don't. Unless you absolutely have to -- you're on vacation or something. Really, you're better off just staying home (it's cheaper, too) and make eating out a special, adults-only treat, as we did last night, to celebrate our anniversary. We got a sitter for a couple of hours and went to a great restaurant with annoying waiters and overpriced wine and not a highchair or booster seat in sight. And it. was. wonderful.

 



Comments

 

SER said:

We went out for brunch on Mothers' Day, and I said to B.: "Is it wrong to leave your kid at home so you can enjoy Mothers' Day brunch?"  Because we didn't.  No, we were too busy trying to keep S. from stabbing himself or others or upending water glasses or diving from his highchair onto the floor (which he very, very nearly did).  

May 13, 2008 12:13 PM
 

Melissa said:

I'd go with #5 all the way!  I have only one, and it's still a fiasco.  

Or take your relatives with you.  The more people attending, the more helpers to distract/ feed/ move things/ take the baby out for a breather.

May 13, 2008 1:29 PM
 

Eva said:

I totally agree on mediocre. When we are on the road and stop for a meal, we now go to annoying chains we never would have frequented before. But they are kid oriented and crayons (when they're not eating them) and kids' menus to play with help. We sometimes say, when we are out, it's so not worth it... but then we do it again a month later.

Also, I started taking one kiddo to lunch occasionally. It's rare one on one time, and so far, they are better behaved when we are one on one.

May 13, 2008 1:34 PM
 

Karen said:

You forgot a rule: Ask for the bill to come with your food.

May 13, 2008 1:45 PM
 

Danielle said:

My best tip: Go to a buffet!! We've discovered that taking our 21 month-old girls to the Indian Buffet works every time! The food is ready immediately (though we still bring food for them) so we can actually eat before they get restless. I swear, it's so much better than waiting for your order.

May 13, 2008 4:57 PM
 

BSB said:

I like it all and also agree with Melissa that if you bring lots of family... well many hands you know. We went to Thai with our one year old when his grandparents were visiting and it was easy peasy then silly us went with him a week ago and it was SOOO HARD!!! So far we've had really good luck at the food court at the mall. Sad, I know but all the external stimulus helps a lot, I don't feel as guilty about the mess, and everyone gets to eat whatever they want! HA. We do the nice dinners just us and I must say it is extremely nice to eat out and have no babies in the room.

May 13, 2008 5:20 PM
 

mombo said:

I'm sure this tip gets repeated frequently in annoying parenting magazines all the time, but I didn't know this until I had a kid: Ask the server to bring the kids' food as soon as it's ready. They don't have to wait, and you can help them without your food getting cold. Of course, they'll be closer to done when your food finally arrives, but at least they're not starving beasts. I always hope mine will be sated and slower...dare to dream!

May 13, 2008 11:22 PM
 

Susie Felber said:

I think your tips are awesome! Honestly, that's all I have to say.  Oh, wait, one more thing: remember that outdoor cafes are your friend!  :)

May 14, 2008 1:07 PM
 

shm18 said:

I'm with tip 5 all the way.  It is no fun. I prefer to do take out from restaurants now and enjoy at home, letting the little one run around or do whatever. No stress and we still get to eat good food that we didn't have to be hassled with cooking.

May 14, 2008 2:01 PM
 

Loona said:

Happy Anniversary! As a mother of 10-month old twins, I read this post shuddering and then laughed out loud when I got to #5. Amen.

May 14, 2008 2:03 PM
 

betty said:

we keep thinking the restaurant crazy will pass so we try, try again. not passing. 17-month-olds. most times i look down at my plate and wonder where my food went. i don't remember eating it. i don't know what it tasted like. i don't know if it was good. it's gone. i had to vacuum it into my stomach in between cutting small toddler food bits and saving everything in go go gadget arm's reach. number 5 it is. sniff.

May 14, 2008 2:08 PM
 

mattdm said:

Brunch is where it's at. Breakfast, really.

Brunch on Saturdays (#3) at Johnny D's (#4!) in Davis Square. They have #2 already there, and it's generally super-kid-friendly.

When the girls are a little bigger, Renee's in Teele Square is awesome. The food is way above point #4 but they're still not too busy early Saturday morning, and all the staff will gush over your kids.

May 14, 2008 2:39 PM
 

Karen said:

Danielle - absolutely correct.  The local Chinese Buffet knows us well (and by well I mean the ten times or so that we've eaten out with the twins and their younger brother in the three years they've been alive).

Also - ask for carryout.  Most restaurants will do this even if they are not normally a "carry out" establishment.  Just mention you have three toddlers. =)

May 14, 2008 9:01 PM
 

Sheri said:

We've gotten by by finding places that will take our order before we get there and our food is waiting for us when arrive.  Of course, it works best with pizza, and if you know their menu (get a take out one if you don't).  We love the local Italian place for lunch (dinner is too pricey) and they know if they let us do this, they'll see a lot more of us (and we tip REALLY nicely).  In fact, the Italian place even removes the Sweet n Low and sugar off the table before we get there, and in the past has even gotten the high chairs in their place.  Try it.  It worked for us.

May 14, 2008 11:12 PM
 

Page said:

I am an expecting mom myself so I am not sure if these ideas are good, but I came across this blog and I thought you would find this post helpful.  I want to believe there is a way.

www.susiej.com/.../dining-in-a-wine-list-restaurant-with-kids

May 16, 2008 10:37 AM
 

Megg said:

Its always fun to have your child play fetch with their toys and the waiter/waitress.  that is of course when the head/hand banging is done.

you are a brave mama to dine avec deux bebe.

May 16, 2008 11:09 PM
 

Alyson said:

Somehow, someway, I've managed to take my girls out to lunch with my BFF once a week - every week - for almost 17 months!  I don't know why they're so good at restaurants, (I totally just jinxed myself, btw) but bringing their food with you is an absolute must!  I bring almost a whole meal (like cubed chicken, some strawberries, pretzels, and raisins) and then order something for them to share (usually a grilled cheese).  By the time the food comes, nearly everything I brought them is gone.

Oh, and if they're not on the table when we sit down, I have the wait staff bring me 4 spoons.  They're invaluable if someone gets fidgety!

May 17, 2008 12:48 AM
 

caesar said:

hi,

all of you,i was just looking on internet for tips to take baby out for lunch. well matter of fact she is just one year sweet and its first time for me. well i hope everything go's well and just perfect on this friday sunny afternoon.

     i am just a guy who trys best to keep her happiest as i can. making her laugh,singing her songs.

once again thank you all for the words.

lol caesar babysitt's in 21st century

but i am having enermous fun and life learning lessons,which no money can buy.thanks to god.

May 23, 2008 11:10 AM
 

D' said:

good rules!  we often order before we sit down and wouldn't think twice about calling order in.  We don't get out much ourselves but picking noisy family type places is always a relief.  Buffet is always good..

May 24, 2008 2:46 PM

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I'm an advertising copywriter, wannabe novelist, mother of twins, musician's wife, bleeding heart and wiseass.

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Jane Roper

Jane Roper in Boston

One baby? Piece of cake. Try two. This working mother gives you the inside scoop on the ultimate in extreme parenting: twins.

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