Gimme all Your Kid Friendly Recipes

    • Gold Top Dog

    Gimme all Your Kid Friendly Recipes

    Cassaroles, sandwich ideas, supper meals, HELP!

    My 5 and 3 yr olds are in a major rut of spaghettios, campbells noodle soup, sandwiches and chicken nuggets/fries!  I need some more ideas.

    Thanks for the ideas. I try to offer healthful things like nuts, seeds, fruits, veggies, but they won't touch them, aside from dd (3) who adores lettuce- plain even.

    Compared to the way I feed my dogs and myself, they surely have to be deficient, I would think! 

     

    • Gold Top Dog

     I like something that is fairly gross, but kids may like it.

    1 box of pasta

    velveeta cheese (not certain how much exactly, I think I use half the box)

    1 can each cream corn and kernel corn

    I like to add some ground meat, either beef or turkey, and think broccoli would also work nicely in here. Bake it for about an hour, don't drain the corn. If you don't want the top crunchy, put tin foil on top. 

    • Gold Top Dog

    How about a veggie or fruit pizza?  Sometimes if you prepare veggies and fruits in new, unexpected ways, the kids will eat them.  Jessica Seinfeld wrote a book about how to put vegetable and fruit purees into foods so your kids won't even know they're eating something thats good for them.  If I remember correctly, it was called "Deceptively Delicious".

     

    I remember when my daughter was small, she refused to eat any other protein than chicken.  So no matter what we ate (pork chops, fish, etc.) as long as we called it chicken, she ate it. Embarrassed

    ETA:  this site has a lot of good information and recipes regarding picky eaters:

    http://www.parenting.com/recipes/picky-eaters/

     

    Deb W.

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    Thanks! I have her book, I'll go dig it out and read through it again :)

    • Gold Top Dog

     What about burritos or quesadillas? For quesadillas I like to put a large flour tortilla in a pan, add cheese, black beans, and sometimes corn. After it starts to melt I flip one side over (in half). Use a pizza cutter to cut it into wedges, then serve with salsa and sour cream for dipping.

    • Gold Top Dog

    You could always try fruit smoothies with them.  My niece and nephew HATE fruit but when I make smoothies they go nuts for them....and they are healthy!  They also LOOOVVVEEEE grilled cheese sandwiches (gotta be their fav).....soo easy to make also.

    • Gold Top Dog

    The easiest way to get them to eat is to get THEM to prepare it. 

    Get some basics -- like a jar of "Better than Boullion" (chicken, beef, chili -- it's a great "base" for soups).  Real noodles (NOT CANNED SOUP) like ... Muellers ??? In the BAG.  Either get carrots frozen that are cut up or the matchstick pieces in the produce dept.

    Get some chicken pieces -- maybe a cup (either already cooked or raw you might have to cut this up in advance -- small pieces - boneless thighs are nutrient rich and tasty and cheap).  Put on a pot (quart or quart and a half) of water.  Let them each add half teas. of Better than Boullion (or ONE boullion cube) and show them how to rinse off the chicken (nitrile glove time -- you can teach them to be careful here too) in a collancer and then put the chicken pieces in the pot.

     TEach them here that they can't tip the pan off the stove -- for now that's a Mommy thing.  Just watch when it comes to a boil, use a slotted spoon and take off the white foam that comes to the top.  Set it off the heat and stress not to touch the pan (but supervise here).  Let them each add some carrots (if you want to put in a cup, let each of them "measure" half a cup in a plastic measuring cup). 

    Doesn't take long -- maybe 20 minutes and you've got cooked carrots and cooked chicken.  Again, take it off the heat.  Wash hands -- Mom opens the noodle bag carefully -- and everybuddy gets to put in a handful or two of dry noodles.

    There are TONS of kinds of noodles you know?  There are spaghetti noodles that you can break up (and little hands LOVE doing that), there are big honking FAT noodles, there are alphabet noodles?  They are ALL FUN because THEY made it.  Just bring back to a boil until the noodles are tender.

    While that's going THEY set the table (so let them draw on paper towels with crayon to 'decorate' their own placemats!) and make some toast (yep -- blunt butter knife -- buttered toast on paper towels - not hard but THEY can do it).

    You've got totally nutritious chicken noodle soup that is awesome.  Trust me -- YOU will think you've never had better.  Sure you can add just a tiny bit of parsley iF you want -- but it's sure not necessary. 

    Chili?  THIS IS SOOOOOOOO EASY!!!

    Get a pound or two of ground beef, a can of diced tomato (or sauce -- make that a BIG can) and a can of red beans, or pinto beans or whatever you can).  Some shredded cheese in a zip bag (cheddar -- don't get exotic).

    Mom has to saute the ground beef.  You hold the can and little hands can, with supervision, press the level to "open" a can of beans and a big can of diced tomatoes (or tomato sauce).  Use a slotted spoon to transfer the ground beef into a pan.  Then they dump in the tomato, they dump in the beans, again -- maybe half teas. Better Than Boullion Chili paste for each one to measure in.  THEY stir it ... (careful -- that burger is a bit hot but with canned tomato and beans on it, it won't be dangerous). 

    Put it back on the stove and heat for 15 - 20 minutes.  It does NOT have to be chili-cookoff blazing hot spicey (which makes most kids not like it).  But again -- it's simple, nutritious.

    Serve with crackers or toast or whatever works for you. 

    AGain -- they helped make it -- YUM. 

    VEGGIE soup that is EASY and fun:

    A package of stew beef from the meat dept.  (You may want to cut that up some more in advance - I like smaller pieces of meat in mine)

    Go to the ethnic department and get a cellophane tube of Manichewitz Minnestrone Soup if you can.  It has a little packet of spice in one end and dried veggies and beans in the rest of the tube.

    Big pot -- couple of quarts of water.

    Big can of tomatoes (diced)

    A frozen package of mixed veggies (probably without limas -- they're in the soup mix)

    Use a crock pot for this and it's completely kid safe. 

    Fill 1/2 full with cold water.  Somebuddy gets to add in the stew beef pieces.  Then kid scissors again open the package of mixed veggies and add those. 

    Somebuddy gets to open (carefully -- kid's scissors) the tube of soup stuff -- dump that in -- let the older of the two open the little spice packet and dump THAT in.

    Put the lid on and turn the crock pot on -- and tomorrow at lunch you have awesome soup! THEY MADE IT.

    Go to the market for some fresh italian bread and let them TEAR off pieces (it's more authentic anyway) at the table to eat. 

    These are FUN things to do.  If they get to help, they'll be more motivated to eat.  Even such a thing as letting them set and decorate the table invests their effort into it.  Otherwise all they get to do is sit down and complain about it.

    If you are a baker, email me -- I have two cookie recipes that will knock your socks off.  One is a recipe for Molasses cookies -- but you add a teas. of baking soda (not powder, but SODA) to the molasses and STIR -- and it **GROWS** (it's a chemical reaction).  Then it requires a cup of sour cream -- and you add a teas. of soda to that -- and stir -- and AGAIN it ***GROWS***.

    It is SO much fun to make with kids.  You mix up the dough and drop by spoonfuls on the cookies sheet, and then you use a wet glass to mush them flat.  Sprinkle some sugar on the top and then Raisen Faces in the middle of the cookies.

    The best thing is -- they are actually GOOD for them.  Molasses is iron-rich, and the spices (cinnamon, cloves) are good anti-oxidants.  Raisins are good fiber and iron.

    I have another similar recipe that is just plain "white" sugar cookies -- it uses the sour cream and soda mechanism above and is again SO much fun to make.  AGain you flatten the cookies with a wet glass and sprinkle sugar (again raisen faces) before baking

    See -- I never HAD spaghettios growing up -- my mother was a stay at home Mom -- and canned stuff was pricey. 

    Honeslty?  I've made all these things with kids when I was teaching.  (especially the cookies - and NEVER EVER did I have a kid turn up their nose at one!!  by the time they bake they smell SO good!!)

    • Gold Top Dog

     Something I do for myself (the giant kid in the 25 year old body) is buy the Garden Goodness noodles, with a serving of veggies in a serving of noodles.  V8 makes a juice called Fusion, that has a serving of veggies, and tastes like yummy, yummy fruit juice. I am sitting here with a bowl of macaroni and cheese, that I dumped frozen peas in with the noodles. It has green stuff in it now! LOL If I'm making spaghetti, I saute some finely chopped veggies, until they're nice and soft. Add them to the sauce, and it doesn't add a lot of taste, just texture.

     

    I'm a vegetarian, but I'd happily exist on noodles, bread, and potatoesBig Smile 

     

    • Gold Top Dog

    jennie_c_d

    I'm a vegetarian, but I'd happily exist on noodles, bread, and potatoesBig Smile 

     

    Me too! But add cheese to that list. Smile

    • Gold Top Dog

     I do the same as Callie... get them to help prepare it.  Heck - get them to help SHOP for it!  Get them to PICK the in-season veggies that they want to try.  Have a competition, like who can correctly name the most weird fruits/veggies, or who can guess how you would prepare THIS?!  Get them involved, get them interested. 

    Secondly, offer a variety.  What do YOU fancy for dinner?  Offer that.  If they don't eat it, no big deal.  Clear away, don't make an issue of it and try offering that again in a month or so.