Tips for Picky Eaters

Are you a parent of a child who doesn't like to eat? These
tips for picky eaters is for you. Picky eaters can make life
interesting, especially when it comes time to prepare meals. All
children go through a phase of being picky eaters to some extent while
they are learning and growing; it is the children who continue this
phase and remain picky long term who can have dietary problems
including vitamin deficiency.
As a parent you have to make sure your child is getting enough of the
essential nutrients to remain healthy. When you have a picky eater you
have to find ways of getting those nutrients in your child. Here are
some tips for picky eaters and suggestions to help you through this.
- It is important to remember that a toddler or
preschooler isn’t going to eat as much as a teenager or an
adult. If you serve a large plate of food to a toddler or a preschooler
they will most likely eat what they like most and get full then stop
eating. If you want your child to get a well rounded meal with foods
from each of the groups within the food pyramid you need to offer a
small portion of food from each group to your child. Instead of
allowing the child to eat all of the fruit (or whatever their favorite
portion is) and skip the rest of the meal, giving a little bit from
each group makes your child eat a more balanced meal. I have one child
like this he would fill up on the fruit salad and skip the rest of the
meal!
- Showing an example
of proper eating habits is
important. Instead of commenting on foods being bad or good, you need
to show children good eating habits by example.
- If your child won’t try certain foods
try them in different forms. See if you can hide it in another dish.
Often soups and stews are a great place to sneak in vegetables and even
meats. If your child is picky about eating vegetables you can grate
them and add them to meatloaf or you can make a sauce and pour them
over pasta.
- My favorite
tips for picky eaters is to let
your kids help you cook. Pizza is a
favorite of several children. Letting them make
their own pizzas with healthy toppings is another way of
getting these nutritious foods into your children.
- Choosing a new food item to try weekly is an
excellent way to widen the number of foods that your child will eat.
Make it a family outing to the grocery store, produce stand or
farmer’s market and let your children pick something new to
try this week. Your children will learn to try new foods and you might
find a new favorite along the way.
- If your child is a picky eater it is important
to allow your child a choice of healthy foods to eat daily.
Don’t force any or insist on your child eating everything
that is served. If your child is eating from one food group only then
cut back on choices from that group while increasing the foods you are
allowing from other food groups.
- Cut back on choices that are from
non-nutritive sources. Watch out for empty calories from foods such as
diet soda, french fries, chips, fast food, even juice, they can fill up
on these and not want the "good stuff."
- Involve kids in menu planning as well as
helping prepare the meal. If they want chicken nuggets every night.
Help them see we need variety in our menu. When serving the all time
family favorites, try some new things along the side, such as a salad
or
new vegetable.
- Make it
fun. Shape it, cut it out with a cookie
cutter, or make shapes out of your meals. The simple arranging of
dinner holds great kid appeal. See our page on making food fun.
A tip for picky eaters parents is to try not to add too much pressure
into eating healthy. If your child is
getting their recommended calories and eating nutritious foods, even if
they are the same foods everyday, then they probably are eating okay.
Continue to offer healthy and nutritious foods and as they grow they're
likely to come around.
Do you have tips for picky eaters to share?
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