It’s true.
Not all of the lunch box snacks I pack come from the work of my own hands in the kitchen.
Gasp!
Does this surprise you?
It shouldn’t.
The Modern Mother is in one of the most unique and challenging positions – ever.
Not only must she cook, clean, and take care of the family as generations of women did before her, but now she must also frequently head up the household on her own and even if she is fortunate enough to have a partner who helps, usually works outside the home to meet the family’s financial needs or because she finds her work fulfilling.
Here are a few of the sobering statistics about how the family unit has drastically changed just since I was in grade school:
- About 25% of children are being raised by a single biological parent – almost always the mother.
- In over 15% of homes with both parents, the woman is the primary or sole breadwinner. This trend is on the increase.
- For households with children under the age of 18, the financial burden is primarily on the shoulders of the mother 40% of the time.
- Single mothers are disproportionately poor – about 4 times as often as married households.
- Single mothers are more likely to be receiving government assistance.
- According to the US Department of Education, approximately 40% of children in the United States in grades 1-12 now live in homes without their biological fathers.
- Most mothers today have no close relatives living nearby to help them. The days of Mom, Grandma, aunties and cousins all within the same neighborhood to help out are long gone for most women.
It may take a Village to raise a child, but for most mothers, that Village just doesn’t exist!
These changes represent enormous social upheaval in only a single generation. In short, the home is becoming increasingly maternalistic in nature meaning that mothers are more often running the show either economically, socially or both.
While IÂ am fortunate to have a very involved, wonderful husband of 23 years who actively helps out in the household, I still find it extremely challenging to source and prepare nutritious meals for my family every single day.
Most women I know regardless of their social situation report the very same thing!
There is no more frequent time I need the help of some healthy, prepared food items than the daily and very important task of packing lunch boxes.
I do my very best to make sure all the lunch box snacks consist of unprocessed, whole, and preferably organic ingredients. Â However, I do buy prepared lunch box snacks and I buy them fairly often to round out the whole food selections and for emergencies in the morning during the sometimes mad rush to get out the door on time (which is very early for us).
Here are my current top ten that I buy either from a local store or an online vendor. Â What are your healthy lunch box snacks to buy for school or outings?
PLEASE NOTE: Â I’ve linked to the brands I mention below so you can see the packaging and the look of the product. This makes it easier for you to spot them on the shelf at a local healthfood store. The prices via these online sources are not always reflective of prices locally. Â For example, the potato chips linked below I buy for $5 for 2 large bags … very reasonable!
My Top 10Â Lunch Box Snacks
Potato Chips
Most potato chips and corn chips are a definite “NO” in my book for lunch boxes for two reasons. Â They either contain GMOs or use an unacceptable fat like soy, corn, canola, safflower, cottonseed or sunflower seed oil for frying. Â This is the brand I prefer which uses avocado oil, which is one of the best for frying and potato chips in particular as it is extremely high heat tolerant and non-genetically modified. Â They are also budget friendly!
Jerky
My philosophy has always been to focus my time in the kitchen making what I cannot buy for a reasonable, budget friendly price. Jerky does not fall into this category as there are brands now to buy that are good quality and reasonably priced. Â I used to have to make jerky myself, but now no longer have to. Â Â Yay!
I purchase 3 types of jerky – buffalo jerky, grassfed beef jerky, and free range turkey jerky. We’ve tried many different brands and these are my children’s favorites as well as ones that are free of MSG, chemicals and additives.
Kelp or Kale Chips
A crunchy, tasty alternative to potato chips if you are avoiding starch or on the GAPS Diet are chips made out of kale or kelp (this is the brand I buy).
Cookies
There aren’t a lot of cookies I will buy as lunch box snacks.  Most really just aren’t up to snuff in my opinion even at the healthfood store. I much prefer to make my own cookies if at all possible!  In a pinch, however, there are a few brands (find them here and here) that I consider good enough (notice I didn’t say perfect) to pack as lunch box snacks on occasion.
Nut Butter Crackers
I never buy the peanut butter crackers at the store as they are loaded with additives, chemicals and GMOs. Â I buy a good quality cracker (I buy this one) and spread with either sprouted/soaked nut butter (find them here) or organic peanut butter myself (this is the brand I currently use).
Snack Bars
Good snack bars are hard to find. That being said, my favorite brand is Larabar. Only dates and nuts for the most part in the wide variety offered. The Key Lime Pie, Lemon, and Blueberry Muffin are our favorites (find them here). While the nuts aren’t soaked, sprouted, or even organic, they are good enough as occasional lunch box snacks in my opinion.
Organic Apple Sauce
Apple sauce is a perennial favorite for lunch box snacks. Â Fortunately, you can buy many different brands that use organic ingredients. Unfortunately, every single one I’ve ever checked contains ascorbic acid as the preservative, which is not true Vitamin C. Â But, on occasion, an organic apple sauce snack cup is fine. Â This is the brand I buy.
Carob Chips
Carob chips have a bad rap, but the truth is that they are yummy (this is the brand I use) and packing 20 or so in a small cup is a nice treat for your child. I don’t recommend organic chocolate or chocolate chips in the lunchbox as the caffeine is not good for children’s growing bodies on a regular basis and could definitely affect learning in a negative way. When I was growing up, my Dad, who is a retired MD, never let us have caffeine. Â He said it would harm our developing kidneys.
Fruit Leather
Conventional fruit leathers are a very misinformed choice for lunch box snacks due to the GMO sugar, artificial flavorings and colorings they contain. Â Organic fruit leathers are another matter entirely. Â I like this brand (find it here) which has a wide variety of flavors. Â Skip the ones that say “natural flavors” just to be on the safe side and opt for those that just contain fruit.
Coconut Water
I used to always pack a thermos of fresh milk in my children’s lunch boxes when they were younger. But, this lunch box item doesn’t go over so well in middle school and high school! Â My favorite now is a coconut water. Raw coconut water is the very best choice (this is my favorite), but this is a very expensive lunchbox item, so if budget is a concern, this brand is high quality and more reasonably priced.
Raw Fruit Juice
Pasteurized fruit juice even if organic is a nutritionless, high sugar choice for the lunch box. Â Best to skip it –Â always!
On the other hand, there are a few vendors (this is my current fave) that now offer unpasteurized, cold pressed organic fruit juice in small containers for the lunch box. Note that these brands are only found in the refrigerated section and you must use a cold pack in your child’s lunch if you use them.
These choices are on the pricey side, but occasionally, they make for a nice variety for children. Â I am all for teaching children that not everything in a package is bad .. you can find good quality if you know what you are looking for and are a savvy shopper. It also helps them blend in with their peers and not stand out too much with their (in most cases) very different type of lunch.
Oops! Â I just counted and realized there are 11 lunch box snacks in this list instead of 10. Â I guess that’s probably fine as folks would prefer more ideas than less, so I’ll just leave it as is!
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
More Information
How to Pack a Healthy School Lunch
Lunchables Creator Won’t Feed Them to His Own Kids
* This post contains affiliate links
Sara
Hi Sarah, thanks for this post. I for one would love to hear more about what you pack for your kids in general, besides the packaged snacks. I assume you don’t want your kids using school microwaves so what do you pack them that works well for a school lunch?
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
Yes, I’m aware of this but they are also one of the very few decent snackbars out there. Perfection is difficult to achieve and I choose to buy them on occasion.
kat
Could you possible list some healthy snack foods the average family could afford?
Deb
My thoughts exactly!
Ellen
Kat, I’d try searching for these things (or something similar) in stores like Kroger, Whole foods, local herb shops, country stores or anything with a natural food section. We make regular rounds at the clearance aisle. Its not a perfect solution but we’ve been able to get TONS of healthy foods- including most listed here- extremely cheap that way! 🙂 Amazon’s bulk food isn’t usually a good representation of local pricing. Its great to just look at the packaging and get familiar with products online, but definitely search locally for it. 🙂
Also here are a few coupon sights that may prove helpful for some items! Its a little more work to watch for these coupons but it pays!
http://faithfulprovisions.com/coupons/organic-natural-coupons/
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Please note the section above in the article:
PLEASE NOTE: I’ve linked to the brands I mention below so you can see the packaging and the look of the product. This makes it easier for you to spot them on the shelf at a local healthfood store. The prices via these online sources are not always reflective of prices locally. For example, the potato chips linked below I buy for $5 for 2 large bags … very reasonable!
Paula A.
Sometimes the school requires disposable snacks on field trips. My daughter has been enjoying plain goat milk yogurt (we buy the small size cup for field trips) with freeze dried fruits, especially blueberries. It’s very expensive, but she likes the crunchiness with the yogurt. We also buy wild caught smoked salmon.
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
Awesome!
Amanda
I’ve recently discovered Caveman bars, a Paleo snack bar, and they are quite yummy !
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
Will have to check those out. Thanks!
Helen Hall
I was excited to read this post until I clicked on your links and saw $42 bags of potato chips and $20 packages of cookies. This seems misleading considering your opening paragraphs about single mothers and financial necessities. Sadly it is misleading. I hope your affiliate pay is good enough to be able to afford these exorbitant “in a pinch” snacks.
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
These foods are much more affordable in the store … I provide the links so you can see the packaging so you know what to look for in the store. Do I buy these potato chips online? No. I just bought 2 large bags of the avocado chips yesterday for $5 at our locally owned healthfood store.
Ellen
Yes, Amazon is the “everything store” and its the easiest place to do research, look at reviews, packaging…. Its super nice to be able to see the packaging ahead of time too easily pick it off the shelf visually when we find it locally. So THANK YOU! I appreciate the work it takes to assemble this and it IS a huge help! And if you happen to get a few pennies from one of the links along the way, well YEY FOR THAT! If anyone should, its you! This is such a valuable blog, I’m grateful that family’s health has VASTLY improved as a direct result of this site.
Megan
The prices are also “high” because it’s for multiple bags of chips or cookies — often times Amazon only sells grocery items in bulk, so it’s going to look exorbitant at first until you do the math. You can actually get a lot of good grocery items on Amazon in bulk for pretty good prices–I do recommend it if you’re trying to be frugal and feed little ones!
Elizabeth Yarnell
I totally agree that you can find an acceptable potato chip that is non-GMO and made with non-hydrogenated oils and even sprinkled with sea salt instead of mined salt. I also feel okay about packing organic popcorn and organic, wheat-free Clif Kids Z-bars (Chocolate Chip is my kids’ fave) in lunchboxes. Thanks for the great ideas as school gets underway this fall!
Ellen
Jackson’s Honest Potato Chips are also very good.
They’re made with coconut oil!
http://www.honestchips.com/
Christy
I’m surprised sending milk doesn’t go over well in middle and high school for you. My son is a junior and takes a 16 oz bottle of raw milk in his lunch daily. I use a glass water bottle and it goes into the dishwasher every night. An ice pack keeps it, and the rest of his lunch, cold.
Incidentally, he also takes a blender bottle of raw milk kefir each day to shake up with some protein powder after his morning workout
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
I would recommend ditching the protein powder especially for a young, growing child. No matter what the marketing hype on a particular brand, protein powder is a highly processed, denatured factory food and depletes vitamin A and taxes the kidneys.
rebecca
I don’t buy any packaged snacks because my husband will eat them in a day and there won’t be anything left for lunches! But as my kids aren’t school age yet and we will be homeschooling, lucky I won’t have to worry as much about them comparing their lunches with other kids.
ErinCF
Thanks Sarah! I know it is so important to be informed about the things to avoid, but it is so nice to also read a reality based article about the “yesses” that exist. I am at a bit of a different point then you are in my nutritional journey, but I find your blog a wealth of information to keeo making next steps.