Culinary Tips Dress Up Vegetables
Vegetables can play an important role in helping
control kids' weight gains while supplying important
nutrients they need for growth and development.
But
getting kids to eat them can sometimes be a challenge.
"To
get kids to eat vegetables, they must be available
when and where kids tend to eat, be very easy- to -eat,
and taste good," said
Joan Carter, R.D., an instructor in the department
of pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine and a
cordon-bleu trained chef.
To make vegetables more tempting to kids,
Carter offers these tips:
- Offer the new vegetable at the beginning
of the meal when small children are the hungriest.
Serve vegetables in new combinations. Children
tend to favor peas, potatoes, carrots, beans and corn. Mix
these vegetables with others they are less likely to
eat, such as broccoli and cauliflower.
- Use
a little fat, sugar, and salt to make the healthy foods
'taste good' to kids. Cook carrots with a little sugar
and chicken stock; make carrot 'slaw' with raisins;
top broccoli with low-fat cheese sauce; add grated
vegetables like carrots or squash to home-baked muffins."Kids
are born liking sweet tastes, so use this to your advantage," Carter
said.
- Prepare
vegetables in new ways. Try
a stir-fry or 'fortify' prepared soup with extra fresh
or frozen vegetables. Mix a vegetable in with a favorite
food, such as peas in macaroni and cheese or blend
soft cooked carrots into mashed potatoes. Add vegetables
to pizza toppings or sautéed
minced veggies like broccoli and red pepper and add
to spaghetti and pizza sauces, meat loaf, and pureed
soups. Make oven-baked sweet potato 'fries' or bake
this high-fiber, vitamin-A rich alternative to white
potatoes with a touch of sugar, cinnamon and cloves.
- Make eating veggies fun and easy.
For kids over the age of 4, keep veggie 'kabobs' with
cherry tomatoes and cucumber slices or 'grab bags'
with baby carrots, broccoli 'trees,' and celery sticks
near low-fat dips or salsa on a child-level shelf in
the refrigerator. Use cut-up pieces of vegetables to
make a "smiley
face" on mashed potatoes. Offer an edible spoon,
such as a stalk of celery, to scoop up chili or stew.
- Enlist kids to help scour magazines for new veggie
recipes that the family could try. Engage kids in
an "ingredient-list
scavenger hunt" at the grocery store and later
let them assist in preparing the new recipe at home.
- Become
a family of Farmers' Market 'explorers' who stop and
ask growers about their produce, their farms, and how
they cook their vegetables for themselves. Grow a family
vegetable garden.
- Be a good role model. Eat
your vegetables, and show you excitement about finding
and trying new ones.
But, what if despite your best efforts, your children
still turn up their noses at anything yellow, green
or leafy?
"Don't give up," Carter said. Young children
tend to be 'neophobic,' which literally means
they are 'afraid' of new foods. "It
may take some time before kids try a vegetable and
it might take a lot of tries before they begin to like
it," she said.
Carter's advice: Continue to
offer vegetables at each meal and encourage children
to try one bite. If
they don't like it, that's fine. Allowing young kids
to stop at one bite can make trying new foods less
scary, while forcing them to eat something they truly
don't like will only make the situation worse.
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