Last night my lovely teenage daughter said she didn’t really appreciate the fresh parsley in the cous-cous I made.
While my daughter has come far in the picky eating category, I found myself resorting to an old parent tactic that worked when she was little.
I told her to give me four bites. We both smirked and she quickly chowed down four little bites.
I must have forgotten how clever she is.
Tactical parents need to be very specific.
I could have said give me four gargantuan bites, and I also could have drawn a line down the middle and said eat half.
I haven’t been in creative parenting picky eater mode for awhile now
The above technique playfully encourages a picky child to eat.
When my son was in pre-school they often hosted parent education workshops.
One educator was a hoot of a lady who taught us all kinds of tricks.
Years later when educating parents about the alternative food market, I incorporated her tips with my tried and true experiences to share with parents who were searching for ways to feed their families well
First of all, if you are parent who does not eat or incorporate whole fresh foods into your diet, then perhaps you might wonder where the example for your child might come from.
It really begins with you.
A carrot might be oooky rabbit food, and sure it might come out of the ground long, orange and perhaps even need to be peeled, but you can shift the image of a healthy food for a child’s eye by making it fun and offering them carrot peels, shreds, rounds, diagonals, sticks, juliennes, or even blocks of carrots. 
carrot sunburst flickr image
Same thing with zucchini!
We got far with the fact that broccoli looked like trees and how fun it was to eat the tops of the trees off. When that stopped working we got savvy with yogurt based dips and trees turned into something to dip instead
Broccoli chopped makes great green sprinkles on just about anything. What other veggies make great sprinkles?
Calling them sprinkles changes the tone – would you agree?? 
broccoli heaven flickr image
It’s all the same food with just a bit of a creative twist
Celery smiles, celery sticks, celery shredds, grated celery…
See a pattern here??
A cracker, toast point or rice cake with cream cheese on it becomes a palette for faces made up of just about any veggie or fruit you have, carrot shreddies for hair, half zucchini moons for eyelids, sunflower seeds or raisins for eyes – better yet – spread out the goodies and let them make their own faces
During a particular we don’t do veggies phase I went as far as taking a bunch of steamed veggies pureeing them in the blender with cottage cheese and parmesan.
Kids adore this on crackers, it was loaded with veggies and yet what they knew is mom let them play with it and spread it on their own
Want to make peanut butter crunchy ? Add shredded carrots. Carrots are sweet.
My kids went through a ”we don’t do green” phase.
Instead of taking on the please eat something green game … I asked OK what colors do we eat this week? I let them pick three colors and if they skipped green that week, fine by me.
At lunch time we would decide which 3 vegetables we’d eat that day. I’d ask my kids, should that yellow pepper be in circles, smiles or lines… they got to choose.
Each layer of participating had them own their part of the meal and enjoyment
I’d make extra for snacks and keep them on the fridge for grazing
Before dinner I would say nothing and put out a bunch of raw veggies while cooking, my kids would sneak in and eat them, come back and sneak some more. Did I care if they ate their veggies at dinner if they grazed before? 
sassy yellow pepper filckr image
I was lucky that my kids adored soups and spaghetti sauce – I could blend any sauce with all kinds of steamed veggies and they never knew
Kids make funny decisions. One vegetable made my son burpy, later he’d tell me – that taste comes back in my mouth - I didn’t like that, mommy
Good to know !
When they tell you it’s even better, but when they can’t tell you ? Is that their fault?
During these particular green is ooky times or other phases my child would go in and out of times
I was exceedingly grateful for their chewable vitamins. I knew that if I didn’t strategically win that food battle that day, Iat least had that daily very high quality nutritional insurance.
Today BOTH of my kids really enjoy their vegetables. I believe it’s because of a life long habit we created together as a family. 
veggie bouquet flickr image
The above photo is by Timothy K Hamilton
K a r e n H a n r a h a n
Wellness Educator/Nutritional Consultant
Mentoring YOU to Health Success
708.482.0678
Websites:
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Member of BNI – West Suburban BNI: “Chapter Mentor”
Member of West Suburban Women Entrepreneurs www.wswe.org
WSWE Board Member and Programming Chair
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8 Comments
Fabulous pix, Karen!
Thank You!
Please put an attribution next to my photo, as required by my Creative Commons license.http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/deed.en It should read “Photo by Timothy K. Hamilton”Thank you, and thanks for using my photo.
absolutely, I’ll add the attribution
thank you for your beautiful photography
Thanks very much for putting an attribution next to my photo, as required by my Creative Commons license.http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/deed.en Thank you, and thanks for using my photo.Timothy K. Hamilton
ypu are wonderfully welcome Timothy – your work is remarkable
That is really very good article. I am glad to know. Thanks!
Thats great, I never knew before this blog.