As parents of small children, it can sometimes
be a struggle to convince your child to eat certain kinds of food and introduce
new items to their diet. There are times when they would refuse fruits and
vegetables, and would rather eat fried dishes and even junk food.
But if you want them to develop healthier
eating habits, the best trick is to make eating more fun for the kids and the
entire family.
1. Schedule your mealtime
There's no better way to start than by keeping things organised. By setting a schedule for meal times, you are making them aware of when they should be eating and how much time they should spend at the dining table. This means you are slowly introducing a disciplined eating habit, which they will naturally adapt even after they grow older. This also allows them to cut on the junk foods and avoid skipping meals. Meal schedule shouldn't only include breakfast, lunch and dinner, but as well as in-between snacks.
2. Plan a menu
Repeated exposure to the same dishes can cause your child to lose their appetite and divert to junk food, so planning your meals ahead will help avoid this. It will also be easier on your part as you won't have to stress about what to prepare every mealtime.
3. Try out some new,
mix-and-match recipes
Meal-planning is also
the perfect time to learn new, perhaps healthier recipes, and experiment on
dishes. And since you are after giving your child nutrient-rich options, you
can always substitute certain food items with healthier choices. Instead of making
French fries, offer them sweet potato fries. Or make your own soup rather than
reheat from the can.
Also, if you have
leftovers from dinner, you don't need to serve the same dish again. You can
always recreate and use them as ingredients for another meal. You can also
incorporate their vitamin supplement into their meal. For instance, you can
easily mix Vita Sprinkles into their meal, or even use it as a
topping.
4. Presentation makes food more appetising
Do you notice how appetising food is even when you're just looking at their photos? It's all about presentation. Whilst our taste buds will be the final judge in how much we will like the meal, the visual presentation of the food will certainly drive excitement in us. This is also true for kids.
When preparing meals and snacks, kick it up a notch with an artistic approach. Use skewers when serving fruits, create yummy dips, mould pastries and slice bread into interesting shapes (stars, half moon, hearts – or shapes that your kids really like), and use attractive containers and wares.
Some parents can also use coasters and placemats with special designs to entice their kids to eat and make eating time more enjoyable.
4. Presentation makes food more appetising
Do you notice how appetising food is even when you're just looking at their photos? It's all about presentation. Whilst our taste buds will be the final judge in how much we will like the meal, the visual presentation of the food will certainly drive excitement in us. This is also true for kids.
When preparing meals and snacks, kick it up a notch with an artistic approach. Use skewers when serving fruits, create yummy dips, mould pastries and slice bread into interesting shapes (stars, half moon, hearts – or shapes that your kids really like), and use attractive containers and wares.
Some parents can also use coasters and placemats with special designs to entice their kids to eat and make eating time more enjoyable.
5. Make eating time a time for learning
Children are naturally curious beings, so use dinnertime a chance
to tickle their young minds. Aside from teaching them about dining etiquettes,
you can sharpen their knowledge by discussing with them the importance of the
food they are eating, telling them fun stories about it, its history, and so
on. Sure you need to research about the facts yourself, but it isn't a bad
idea, right?
6. Let kids help in selecting and preparing meals
Involving your little ones in planning meals, shopping for food
and preparing dishes will allow you to educate them better about health and
nutrition. Plus, it will definitely be a fun experience for them and a great
time for bonding. You should also let them create and decorate their own
healthy snacks.
7. Create an interesting checklist for the food they have eaten
Most kids love scribbling, so let them enjoy it. Create a mealtime
checklist – whether on a board or paper – complete with drawings and colours.
You can write down which food groups they have consumed for the day, which ones
they need to have, and let them draw the foods they have already eaten.