Children, Finicky Eating and Vegetables
My mother did other tricky things to get me to eat what she thought was a healthy diet necessary for a growing child. To ensure I got enough protein, she would sometimes mix an egg into my chocolate milk.
We all want our children to eat healthy foods. In the name of good nutrition, many a parent has resorted to amazing ruses. Recently, I saw on Amazon.com that there was a new book out with lots of suggestions on how to dress up vegetables so that children will eat them.
The problem with this strategy is: if you dress the vegetables up so that they are unrecognizable, how will your children learn to like them? If they never get to taste vegetables in their natural form and only meet them in a heavy disguise, they may enjoy some short term nutritional benefits, but they won’t become habituated to eating vegetables, and they won’t choose to eat vegetables when the choice of menu is their own.
My nine year old daughter loves salad. Not salad dressing or croutons, but the actual lettuce and tomatoes that are at the heart of the salad. How did I achieve this? Quite by accident. I never eat salad myself. When she was a toddler, every time I ordered a steak, I let her have the salad. For some reason, she took to it naturally, and she still prefers salad to steak.
I have never pushed vegetables on my daughter, nor have I worked hard to make her like them. I offer vegetables with every meal, and if she doesn’t like a particular type, it’s not a big deal. I like peas, raw. She likes peas okay, but she prefers lettuce. If I serve up bite-sized carrots as a side-dish, she will chew on them absent-mindedly. Sometimes she finishes them all, and sometimes she doesn’t. It’s okay with me, either way. I prefer bell peppers and onions; she likes brussels sprouts and broccolli. We both like steamed cauliflower.
Many vegetables are crunchy and appetizing when they are fresh and raw, without condiments, and sauces. Others are best lightly steamed. No vegetable tastes good if you boil all the juices out of it, puree it, or douse it with sugar. Not coincidentally, they are also less nutritious when you do that. If you disguise vegetables too well, they can lose their nutritional identity.
In the long run, it is not so important whether a child eats a particular vegetable at any given meal. There’s no reason to panic if they don’t. The important thing is to allow your child to discover for himself which vegetables he likes. The best way to do that is to introduce them in their fresh, natural form. Leave off the disguise, and let your child make the choice of his favorite vegetables. Whatever he picks, it’s bound to turn into a healthy habit.
(c) 2008 Aya Katz
I think the emphasis on us having to eat a variety of food is a bit ridiculous. Most people have certain foods they like, and life could be so much easier if you just let kids choose what they like to eat. Some parents view this as being a short order chef, but it does not have to be. Even picky eaters usually have a vegetable they do like, and parents could just buy more of this one. But I have seen some segments of documentaries where they knew a child was a picky eater, but would practically let the child starve because she was not eating anything besides beige colored foods. One girl loved peanut butter, apples, and pancakes with syrup, but the parents would only let her eat what she liked at breakfast. They even admitted they let her weight drop quite low before they actually let her eat a bit more of what she wanted. They forced her to go to the hospital to fix her beige food obsession, but it turns out there are some adults with it. One woman only eats peanut butter sandwiches and drinks chocolate milk, and has an adult son is the same way. They were actually healthy, according to their doctors. They just have more pronounced food phobias than most.
Hi, Julia. I agree. Nobody should be forced to eat anything. Peanut butter is perfectly nutritious and chocolate milk actually has milk in it. It is good to eat a variety of foods and be open to different menus, but that kind of openness is not achieved through coercion. Also, sometimes children sense what is nutritious in the seeming junk food that they choose to eat. I knew of one little girl who at McDonald’s would only eat the chicken nuggets and nothing else. Her parents tried to bribe her to eat fries. But fries are mostly empty carbs, so her instincts were better than theirs.