i don't know if this will help or not....but....when i was that age i went on a kick of only being willing to eat scrambled eggs and green peas....my mother took me to the doctor who said "well, she may turn green and cackle...but she'll be fine'...
seriously tho, perhaps you might try giving him the 'nourishing meal' (meat and veggies) at lunch time or even breakfast and then the other tings at supper time....he might be more willing to accept it then....
little kids go thru periods of not eating much for a while....then just before they start a growth spurt, they gobble up everything in sight....he might just be in a slow growth period....
is he tired by dinner time?...tired kids are cranky kids...and cranky kids generally refuse everything as a matter of course.....
does the whole family eat at the table for all three meals or just dinner?...if it's just at dinner you might pay attention to how much attention he's getting by refusing to eat....could be an attention getting behavior....
and i'd like to take this opportunity to remind you that at 22 months he's not really old enough to reason with...and "breakfast the next morning" doesn't even really fit into his perception....so threatening to give him his dinner for breakfast isn't really a viable threat...
besides, my mother did this to me when i was a kid (grammar school age) i had cold lamb chops and cold veggies for breakfast...and if i didn't eat them, i got them when i came home from school for lunch and then again for dinner and so on til i finally ate them (no snacks and nothing but water to drink)......and now, as a result, i eat everything on my plate practically without tasting it and unless i stop and think, i still (at age 60) tend to wolf down my food and i have a fairly significant weight problem....
and try not to make too many threats...of any kind....especially of you don't follow thru on them....makes you appear to be a non-reliable person...and, like the boy who cried wolf, eventually none of your threats won't be taken seriously....even the really important ones...lots of fun when the kids are older!!
and constantly contrasting his behavior with "good boys" will go a long way to convincing him that he's a "bad boy"....loads of self esteem issues along that road!
good luck....D.
ps....my daughter came up with a pretty clever idea for my grand daughter who is just starting to eat finger foods....ellie loves pasta, especially mac and cheese....jen mixes in strained meats and/or strained veggies to make the pasta more nutritious....