How a busy Mukilteo mom feeds her family — and food blog

  • By Andrea Brown Herald Writer
  • Thursday, August 21, 2014 4:32pm
  • LifeMukilteo

Warning: This mom’s lunch box recipes will put your kid’s Lunchables to shame.

Not only that, it might make you wish she was your mom.

Reshma Seetharam’s food blog, My Foodarama, has meals to whet the appetites of the whole fam damily. Click on the blog’s menu bar that includes vegetarian, meat, seafood, kids lunches, cakes and bakes. Recipes range from ninja cookies and fusion cuisine to pizza and pilaf.

Other than watching her two sons play soccer, nothing excites her more than creating a new recipe or taking on a cake project. Seetharam is a Herald web developer by day, food blogger by night and mother 24/7.

She’s steadfast on her mission to give her family healthy food, especially when they are not at the table with her.

Older son Pratham, 8, is a foodie who adores her cooking. Rishith, 5, is a picky eater and her hard-to-please food critic. Her husband, Paramesh, a Boeing design engineer, is a meat lover by heart. If the recipe doesn’t have meat, it won’t be on his plate.

Seetharam packs lunches for all three of her guys. She doesn’t just slap something between bread, throw in a banana and call it good. For her sons, she cuts up fruit in bite-sized pieces and mixes up noodles or rice with their favorite meats and veggies. It’s arranged in colorful compartments to give it a “wow” factor.

“I have to win them over opening that box,” she said. “Give them enthusiasm to say, ‘Hey, I’m going to eat this.’”

Hubby doesn’t require pretty packaging. He’s easy to please with curry and other traditional India food.

Her strategy: “Play it safe for what they like,” she said. “Take the kids grocery shopping to choose what they like.”

Do her sons appreciate it?

Yes and, well, no.

“They want to be like their friends,” she said.

Pratham has been known to ask, “Mom, can you give me PB&J and bag of chips and juice boxes?”

Once a week, on Friday, he can have whatever he wants, even the Lunchables.

Seetharam also gets a pass. “I don’t cook on Friday,” she said. “I’m done. I need a break.”

The Bangalore, India, native came to the U.S. in 2001, far away from her family and friends.

“Food was the only thing that kept me grounded, kept me close to home,” she said. “That comfort zone came from cooking.”

She moved from Detroit to Mukilteo in 2007. After being downsized from her web developer telecommuting job with IBM in 2009, she still had the job of being a mom.

“It was a blessing. I was a mom of two little boys under three who kept me on my toes. Yet, I craved something to put my brain cells to work, “ Seetharam said.

She started a food blog in 2010. “Quite a few friends asked me for recipes,” Seetharam said. “I found blogging to be a way to share those recipes. India has lot of different cuisines. I started off with Indian, but fusion food was popular. People wanted to have modified quick recipes with ingredients they can find here. Recipes for today’s lifestyles, not hours and hours of cooking.”

Seetharam traces her love of cooking to her childhood. She and her sisters would whisk eggs for numerous cakes while their mom would juggle lunch, grease cake pans, sift, measure … and still find time to say “Not fluffy enough!”

“Even now,” Seetharam writes on her blog, “if I ask Mom a recipe she says, ‘Watch and learn.’ By the time I jot what she’s added in the blender, she is tending to the stir-fry on the stove and she’s chopping the onions. At the same time, somehow, she is washing dishes and clearing the sink, the pots are boiling, blenders are running, the aromas are truly intoxicating. And there I go, lost in her world, miss getting her recipe. We can’t laze and graze around her. She is good!”

Is she any match for her mom?

“No one can ever match their mom, or outdo them,” she said. “Every mom has her own unique way of showering love to her kids.”

Andrea Brown: 425-339-3443; abrown@heraldnet.com. Twitter: @reporterbrown.

Lunchbox recipes

See some of Seetharam’s kid-friendly lunchbox meal recipes on The Herald’s The Dish blog.

Lunchbox tips

1. Send the right portions. Not too little, not too much.

2. Cookie cutters are your friend. They may be silly, but kids love them.

3. Plan a serving of protein, calcium, veggies, fruits, nuts and carbs in every lunch box.

4. The lunch box needs to be colorful enough to entice the child into eating.

5. Have an ample supply of lunch boxes, small containers, drink bottles.

6. Write little notes to tuck in the box to encourage them to eat. It’s OK if they don’t eat 100 percent of it.

7. Freeze drink bottles, desserts, smoothies the night before. Pack the night before if your mornings are rushed.

8. Hang a little sanitizer on their lunch bag or coach them to wash their hands before meal times.

9. Always give them a hearty breakfast, so even if they skip half the lunch some days, it’s OK.

10. Coach your child to bring home leftovers instead of dumping it in the garbage. You will know what nutrition they missed out and fulfill that for dinner.

Source: Reshma Seetharam

Seetharam’s blog

See more dishes and read the recipes at www.myfoodarama.com or facebook.com/myfoodarama.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Life

Lewis the cat weaves his way through a row of participants during Kitten Yoga at the Everett Animal Shelter on Saturday, April 13, 2024, in Everett, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Downward cat? At kitten yoga in Everett, it’s all paw-sitive vibes

It wasn’t a stretch for furry felines to distract participants. Some cats left with new families — including a reporter.

Matt Stewart, left, and Janice Ayala, right, spin during country dance lessons at Normanna Lodge on Tuesday, April 9, 2024 in Everett, Washington. Normanna Lodge will be hosting country dance next Tuesday during PBR Stampede. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Everett Stampede aims to become a Western-themed tradition

The new weeklong event combines a popular Professional Bull Riders event with live music, two-step dancing and more.

Music, theater and more: What’s happening in Snohomish County

Edmonds Center for the Arts plays host to comedian Don Friesen on Friday and Grammy-nominated vocal group säje on Sunday.

2024 Honda Civic Type R (Photo provided by Honda)
2024 Honda Civic Type R

Developed in Japan, and track-tested around the world, the Civic R Type delivers 315 horsepower and 310 lb-ft of torque, making it Honda’s most powerful production vehicle in the U.S.

Suomenlinna
Soul sisters Helsinki and Tallinn are pearls of the Baltic

While they have their own stories to tell, these cities share a common heritage of Swedish and Russian influences.

My trip to Iraq was canceled, so why can’t I get my $7,590 back?

When Diane Gottlieb’s tour of Iraq is canceled, the tour operator offers her a voucher for a future trip. But she wants a refund.

How to help your youngster become a successful adult

Surprisingly, it has little to do with how early you learn the alphabet, start reading, or learn the capitals of every state.

The 2024 Kia Telluride midsize SUV is available in 10 trim levels, all sporting the same V6 engine. (Photo provided by Kia)
2024 Kia Telluride makes every drive a pleasure

The midsize SUV has more going for it than many others in its class.

The 2024 Subaru WRX is equipped with a turbocharged four-cylinder engine generating 271 horsepower. (Photo provided by Subaru)
2024 Subaru WRX lineup adds a new TR model

The TR trim performs like the other WRX models, only better.

Carrying the Newcomb College name, this rare sewing bag fetched a bundle

Who made this linen and silk bag featuring a Louisiana landscape is unknown. The quality of its craftmanship, however, is clear.

Market for sale plants. Many plants in pots
Snohomish Garden Club plans annual plant sale

The event is scheduled for April 27 at Swan’s Trail Farms. Proceeds will go to scholarships.

Bleeding heart
These colorful spring perennials are awakening from their winter slumber

From bleeding hearts and lungwort to candytuft and carnations, a rebirth of bright flowers and striking foliage has begun.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.