Ivanka Trump has admitted that her three children can be “brutal” when compared to her father, Jared Kushner.
On Monday, the 43-year-old daughter of incoming President Donald Trump made a rare appearance at Skinny’s Confidential Podcast Him and Herwhere he spoke about a wide variety of topics including parenting, success, and more.
Ivanka, who married the businessman in 2009, have three children together: daughter Arabella Rose, 13, and sons Joseph Frederick, 11, and Theodore James, eight.
The family primarily resides in Miami, Florida.
But just because she has the last name Trump doesn’t mean she’s exempt from the normal difficulties of being a parent.
During the interview, she admitted that her children sometimes contrast her cooking with her husband’s, as she wakes up and makes them breakfast every day.
“I should have said that Jared makes the most successful breakfast, he makes pancakes,” the shoe designer revealed. “Really delicious pancakes, like every morning.”
“I tried to make French toast the other day, and I’m actually a decent cook, but since he was traveling – I don’t know if you guys are experiencing this yet – (kids) can be brutal to me when they don’t do something as well as they do.” his father,” he admitted.
Ivanka Trump has admitted that her three children can be ‘brutal’ when comparing her to her father, Jared Kushner

But just because she has the last name Trump doesn’t mean she’s exempt from the normal difficulties of being a parent.

During the interview, she admitted that her children sometimes contrast her cooking with her husband’s, as she wakes up and makes them breakfast every day.
“So my kids just saw my (attempt), I tried to make this French toast and I was making my son’s lunch, I forgot, it burned, and for the next twenty minutes I heard that my French toast would never compete with his pancakes.” dad,” he said, adding that it was “very unfair.
The heiress even revealed that she had a ‘debate’ with her children about French toast and how long they should soak in the egg and milk mixture, so they don’t get too soggy.
Since having her three children, Ivanka has shared snaps of herself and her family on her Instagram page, offering a behind-the-scenes look at her life.
And, just a few days after the mogul turned 43 on October 30, she shared her best life tips I had learned so far; His number one piece of advice had to do with family and friends.
‘Family and friends are everything. Nurture these relationships, check in, and let people know you care,” she wrote. ‘As Esther Perel says, “The quality of your relationships determines the quality of your life.”‘
During the podcast appearance, Ivanka also offered a look at how her two parents, Donald and Ivana Trump, raised her and what they taught her.
Ivanka recalled the time she spent with her late mother at the Plaza Hotel in New York, where she served as executive director.
“I used to go see her every day after school, she was the CEO of the Plaza Hotel, the iconic hotel in New York, and I would walk with her, and she was literally like a more polite Eloise at the Plaza,” Ivanka revealed.

“I should have said that Jared makes the most successful breakfast, he makes pancakes,” the shoe designer revealed. “Really delicious pancakes, like every morning,” he said.

Since having her three children, Ivanka has shared snaps of herself and her family on her Instagram page, offering a behind-the-scenes look at her life.

‘I would spend the weekend on construction sites just doing tests. And with that you learn a lot,” Ivanka said.
‘I would run after her and watch her do her thing. My father was the same.’
However, he admitted that there is one thing he feels his parents didn’t show him when he was young.
“There were never any explicit instructions,” Ivanka shared. “I would have liked to have had a little bit of that, to sit back and say, ‘This is how I like to be, this is how I behave, did you notice this?'”
“It was pure observation,” he continued. ‘They never shoved it down our throats, you know, they came and worked with us in this capacity, but if we were curious and interested, they would always want us around.
‘I would spend the weekend on construction sites just doing tests. And with that you learn a lot.”