Picky Eaters - 7 Ways To Get Your Child To
Eat
kids, food,
Let's face it; lots of little kids are picky eaters. Most of
them outgrow this in time, but meanwhile it can be very frustrating
if the picky eater is one of your own children. Questions are
always in the back of your mind - Are they healthy? Will they grow?
Will they fall off the doctor's growth charts? Will they ever eat
anything besides macaroni and cheese? If there are no health issues
and they're just fussy, try some of these tricks:
1. Give your dishes kid-friendly names. For example, call the
food Maria's Pixie Dust Noodles or Beautiful Butterfly Cheese
Sandwiches. Some kids prefer names like Eyeball Soup or Greasy Hair
Spaghetti. Whatever works and you're not too disgusted.
2. Find out what food your child's favorite sports person, super
hero, or cartoon figure like and fix these especially for your
child. Make a big deal out of it and take a picture of your child
eating the extra special dish.
3. Some people are successful with sneaking bits of offending
food into their child's current favorite dishes. For instance,
grated carrots in cookies, extra fruit in yogurt, raisins added to
oatmeal, or a little hamburger mixed in with the mac and cheese.
Baby food can be hidden in a lot of things. Be creative and
experiment. When baking from scratch, you can sometimes take out
half the sugar in cookie, granola, muffin, or snack cake recipes.
Oftentimes you can use applesauce instead of oil.
4. Cut everything up. Sandwiches, toast, cheese, fruit, veggies,
and pancakes can be cut into triangles or interesting cookie cutter
shapes. Ask your child what shape he wants his cheese in today;
hearts or stars. Make the presentation on the plate look
appetizing, and be sure one food doesn't touch another food! That
bothers a lot of kids. You can even buy a new special 'big boy'
plate or 'big girl' bowl. You never know, this could make the food
on the plate look more interesting.
5. Kids like smoothies. Throw frozen strawberries or a berry
blend, plus a banana and any other fresh fruit you want into the
blender along with some milk or orange juice and 1/4 cup of cottage
cheese. Let them help prepare their creation.
6. When eating out, let your picky eater try a bite of the food
from your plate. If you take a bite of your entree and rate it from
1-10, your kids become curious and want to give your food their own
rating. Usually if you rate it a 1 yuk, you get more takers than a
10 yummy. They see it as a fun dare.
7. Use the scarcity tactic. It works in sales and it can work at
home. Make a new dish, but only just enough for the grown ups at
the table. While you're all at the table, have the grown ups praise
the new dish to each other. If the kids ask, tell them it's a new
dish and 'Sorry, but there's only enough here for me and Dad. I
wish you could have some, but this is all there is.' If you've done
a good job, your children will be begging to try it. You can then
happily share the small amount you made.
Some of these tactics will work some of the time, but not all of
them all of the time. What's important is that your attitude is
light and you're not forcing them to eat. Try to stay positive and
be a good food role model. Eventually, although there are no
guarantees, your child will slowly pass through their phase of
picky eating. I thought my picky eater would never ever like more
than 5 things (and 2 of them were pizza), but she did and is now a
healthy and thriving teenager.
Peg Baron
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