My 7 Tips for Picky Eaters (proceed with caution)

Posted by Claire | Wednesday July 4, 201222 comments

My brother and his family came for a visit recently.  As the first in my immediate and extended family to marry and have children, it's inevitable that my advice is sought by new parents on one topic or another.  I generally sit there with a sympathetic look on my face, and after hearing whatever sorry tale, I proceed to comfortingly dispense my thoughts based on years of trial and error and an innate sense of knowing entitlement. (Hey, I'm still alive, my kids are still alive; I must have done something right.)

This was not one of those times.

I watched with increasing astonishment as my niece and nephews shunned my carefully selected chicken nuggets ("All Natural Breading!" "Trans Fat Free!") in favour of raw asparagus and pureed avocado with greek yogurt.  Meanwhile, my children were busy whining about the High Fructose Corn Syrup-free ketchup I had purchased instead of their regular brand.

But then, you already know that my parenting style is more Survival of the Fittest and less Survival of the Perfectly Behaved Vegans and Pacifists

It was time to eat some humble pie and ask my sister-in-law for some advice instead.  Except for the part about eating raw asparagus and green beans.  That's just a recipe for unstable natural gases, but I digress...

She simply explained that their children were raised from Day One to eat these foods with strict but loving reinforcement from Mom & Dad.  So that's when I tuned out because hey, it's clearly a fluke that they were blessed with the only 3 kids in the entire universe who fall for that trick.*

*obviously I realize that there are more children out there who have great eating habits, but since I'm feeling a little testy about the subject just roll with me, 'K?

However, I forced myself to acknowledge some small improvements could be made in my household.  Returning to some of my mother's tried-and-true advice, conducting research (a.k.a. polling my Facebook mommy friends), and asking my children (more on that in a moment), I came up with 7 easy tips that have managed to become part of our regular routine.

#1 - Use Trickery and Deceit

Many parenting books and experts will advise you not to hide veggies in your regular foods and instead serve them openly at the dinner table.  These folks (let's call them "people who clearly don't have children themselves") say that the discovery of new foods, flavours, and textures is a wondrous journey your children will be excited to embark upon.  This, of course, is total crap.  Puree, chop, and mince those veggies right into your spaghetti sauce - 9 out of 10 kids* will never notice the difference.

*yes, I made up that statistic.  Deal with it.

I also switched over all of our regular pasta to whole grain pastas and accidentally-on-purpose forgot to mention this.  It took my kids about 6 months before they finally clued in by which time the issue was completely moot.

#2 - Serve Only The Foods You Personally Are Willing To Eat

Kids are sponges and they will inherit a parent's dietary hangups.  Even if I can bravely gag down a spoonful of garden peas, they will notice my sweaty palms, flushed cheeks, and pupillary constriction and know to avoid the offending food.  I stick to the veggies my husband and I enjoy, and if that means a lifetime without peas and brussel sprouts, well... there are worse things.  Like having to eat liver. 

#3 - When Introducing a New Food, Don't Make Your Kids Finish the Serving

I make a deal with my kids that they only have to try one bite (a proper one).  If they hate it, they don't have to continue.  If they can handle it, they are asked to finish the small serving I've given them.  If they do like it, SCORE!  I always serve several vegetable options at any meal, including one I already know they like.  This way, if they hate the new veggie, I can always rely on them to eat a few carrot sticks or green salad.

When I'm introducing a new main course, I don't cook an alternate entree.  Period.  This is why I make sure to include healthy side dishes they are willing to eat.  The same rule of "Try One Bite" applies.

#4 - Allow Your Kids to Help Decide the Menu Options

Sometimes my kids will refuse a menu item they used to love, not because they genuinely dislike it but because they've grown tired of eating it.  I have a list posted in the kitchen that my children made and signed, naming 5 vegetables (each) that they agree to eat without complaint.  This list may be edited at any time as long as there is always a minimum of 5.  I refer to this list when creating my weekly menu.

Some experts will say to take your children grocery shopping or to community farms and have them pick produce themselves. (Colourful peels! Attractive displays!) However, my kids are smart enough to realize that there is no correlation between taste and sight.  Otherwise eggplant would taste exactly like grape Jolly Ranchers, wouldn't it?  It's false advertising if you think about it. 

#5 - Bribery (also known as "more carrot, less stick")

I don't know where I first saw this tip but it's pure genius.  Put dessert on the table at the same time as the main course.  Importantly, no one is allowed to take a serving of dessert until later, BUT it does provide a  powerful incentive for obeying the table rules. 

Please note: I don't serve a typical dessert every evening (probably more like once a week), nor would I suggest you have dessert every day.  However, there is a wide range of sweet-tooth-friendly options that will work here like fruit salad with a sprinkling of cinnamon sugar, rice pudding with berries, or fresh bread with jam - relatively wholesome treats is the key.

#6 - Make Up for Nutritional Gaps Wisely

When forcing your child to eat a food they hate, you are using negative reinforcement that could lead them to associate that food with a bad outcome (I believe the technical term is "scarred for life").  If you carefully evaluate the foods your children will eat and can identify areas of nutritional shortfall, do your homework to find an alternative source for those vitamins/minerals.  For severely picky eaters, this may require the help of a professional dietician.

For example, we recently started eating edamame which is low in sodium and a fantastic source of fiber, protein, iron, folate, Vitamin K and much more (nutritional info via USDA), plus its neutral taste allows it to be incorporated into almost any main dish.  This pretty much solves my spinach problem with kid #2.

My children will also eat almost any fruit, but due to the high natural sugar, fruit should be consumed in moderation.  We prioritize high fiber and antioxidant-rich fruits like apples and berries over emptier nutritional choices.

#7 - Make Your Nutritional Strategy Achievable

This is probably the most important point I'm going to make.  Any plan you try needs to have a decent chance of success with minimal stress.  You can talk to your kids until you're blue in the face about calories, carbs, and starting good habits at an early age, but it won't work.  Trust me, I've tried.  Unless your children are particularly easy-natured and you are particularly stubborn, a complex strategy is doomed to failure. 

Be prepared to make adjustments as you go along and brush off anyone's criticism of your child's non-brussel-sprout-eating ways.  They are also the people who had to walk 5 miles to school in neck-deep snow and uphill both ways (a.k.a. liars).  And while some will offer the sage wisdom of "they'll grow out of it", I can assure you that this is not always true either.  My husband only agreed to eat my Chocolate Zucchini Cake very recently.  He thinks it's cheating to hide veggies in dessert--pfft.

Do you have a fool-proof trick for picky eaters?  Share them with us in the comments!

Disclaimer: I am neither a nutritionist, dietician, pediatrician, nor voodoo priestess.  My comments here are not meant to take the place of professional advice, so please consult a licensed expert for your specific nutritional needs.
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22 Comments

on July 04, 2012  takoda  28,648 said:



When my oldest was a baby I could give him anything and he'd
eat it and he still is a very good eater today. My youngest was a different
story. I've mentioned before that he was allergic to every thing and anything
that had even just the slightest bit of dairy in it. It took the first seven
months of his life for our moron doctors down here to figure this out. By then
his stomach had been badly burned, on the inside of course. Because of this the
only thing he could eat was goat’s milk and cream of wheat and did until he was
a year old. This made it so hard for us to get him to eat anything, so he's bin
my biggest picky eater. I would just give him one bit of a new veggie and ask
him to just try it, if he didn't like it he didn't have to finish it. This
worked sometimes, but it mostly failed. Since he started high school a few
years ago I have noticed him trying new foods on his own, witch shocked me. He
now loves cauliflower something the rest of us won't touch. So you just never
know what a picky eater may end up eating on their own when they get older.
There's always hope ladies!

on July 04, 2012  midnightsun2288  6,053 said:

I really do think it helps if you raise them from day one eating the healthy stuff, but then again I have no kids, so I don't really have much room to talk. But my uncle is kind of a health freak and he never let his kids eat fast food, and kept them on a low sugar diet and always made home cooked meals. And nowadays they are the least picky eaters I have ever seen and they make healthy choices by themselves. Literally you will see them walking around eating bell peppers like apples and considering yogurt a dessert, it is the weirdest thing. I guess if you are really committed to the whole thing, it works.

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