Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Cooking food to thrive rather than survive

Welcome to the November Carnival of Natural Parenting: Kids in the Kitchen
This post was written for inclusion in the monthly Carnival of Natural Parenting hosted by Hobo Mama and Code Name: Mama. This month our participants have shared how kids get involved in cooking and feeding. Please read to the end to find a list of links to the other carnival participants.


Sometimes when I'm trying to speed-spread the sandwiches for lunch before all hell breaks loose and I hear that telling scraping sound of the chair being pushed across the floor towards me, I inwardly groan. I would love her to help more, but oh the mess! The last time we made pancakes together the flour was flicked everywhere. And by everywhere I mean inside the toaster, all over the hob, in all the buttons of the microwave, somehow infecting the coffee granules which she'd probably been having a nose in...

But I'm learning the importance of letting them help more instead of relying on the mind-numbing babysitter that the television can become. Well, I'm learning to let Imogen help anyway. I have to say I haven't been letting 14-month-old Elise, not yet... she's already like a mini wrecking ball, leaving destruction in her wake, so she's very happy to be left at floor level to raid the kitchen cupboards and hide the garlic in the TV cabinet, or stuff the mixed herbs behind the sofa cushions.
Elise escaping with her loot
The mess is never quite as bad as it looks, anyway. And it usually leads to a clean plate at the end of the meal because she's had a part in making it. We have the best results when Imogen's involved in the whole food process: go out to the vegetable patch and dig up the potatoes that she had helped to plant, brush them clean and put them on to boil, or to the patio to pick tomatoes, cucumber, and lettuce for a salad. Imogen was very excited to eat our carrots but unfortunately something else had got there first. Unfortunately I've had a lapse now and we have nothing ready for picking bar the last remaining tomatoes. Okay, I'll come clean... nothing even in the ground.

Imogen's first strawberry
Some days I've just got too much on and need to whizz something up quickly without the help of tiny hands, but I have found it nice to let Imogen join in and now she regularly asks to help. The girls' favourite meal is spaghetti bolognaise. I talk Imogen through the whole process as she watches stood on her chair, helping when it's safe by stirring with me, and adding ingredients, whilst discussing where each item came from. I'm trying to cook every meal from scratch, or as close as possible to that, using as much garden produce as I can. But despite growing up on a farm, I haven't always eaten this way - far from it actually. When I was younger my family was seduced by the ready-meals and easy snacks, I used to be regularly drawn in by chicken nuggets and suchlike and didn't see a problem with it. I did begin to realise that these foods weren't all that, and having recently come across Nev @ A Lime Less Ordinary's re-blog about mechanically separated chicken  I now feel sick at the thought of eating that "chicken". Even my once beloved McDonald's fix has been kicked to the side. It's strange that it actually seems like a fix: a high straight afterwards, then you feel rubbish... it sounds much more like a drug than a meal.

It would be lovely if our girls grew up without the niggling craving of junk foods that I often experience, and we didn't even have that much when we were children. I rarely had cola or lemonade as a child, and drink them only a few times a year now. 'Fizzy' drinks are never my drink of choice. I hope by avoiding these foods and drinks with the girls, they will grow used to good, healthy food and escape a lifetime junk-craving. Not only does it make me feel happier to know we're eating food that will make us thrive rather than survive, but the girls are hopefully gaining good, life-long food habits.






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Carnival of Natural Parenting -- Hobo Mama and Code Name: MamaVisit Hobo Mama and Code Name: Mama to find out how you can participate in the next Carnival of Natural Parenting!

Please take time to read the submissions by the other carnival participants:

8 comments:

  1. Isn't it always the case that kids who pick their own veggies in the garden are happy to eat them? I have never had to ask my toddler to eat our green beans or tomatoes ... instead I have to stop him from picking the unripe ones! My garden is none too impressive, but it sure has gotten my son excited about veggies.

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  2. Greetings from Malaysia! Hopping in from the carnival!

    I remembered when I started to learn to bake (about a year ago), I got my 2 year old boy to 'help' me mix the batter (just turning the spatula around and around) and he looks so happy when the cookies were baked and was so anxious for them to cool down and the look on his face as he eats the cookies that he helped make, priceless!!

    ~ Jenny ( http://www.imafulltimemummy.com/ )

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  3. Yeah, I didn't have Kieran doing much in the kitchen to "help" me at 14mo either ;) But the fact that they're in there, playing and absorbing and being comfortable with the process - that's the important part :)

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  4. I agree whole-heartedly that involving children in the process (from shopping/harvesting to preparation) helps them develop a good relationship with food. And it helps them to know what real food is!

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  5. I have a 13 month old and I can't wait to have her join me in the kitchen! Right now I move her highchair in the kitchen with me while I'm cooking so she can see everything I do - of course, she gets nibbles of all the ingredients too :)

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  6. Is it not just so true that children will embrace what is on their plate if they had a hand in making it or better yet, growing and harvesting it! I loved the visual of both your children in the kitchen! I am all too familiar with the wrecking ball/tornado affect. Every crack and cranny has some sort of foodstuff after my daughter gets through helping!

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  7. I have that same push-pull when it comes to having my little guy help in the kitchen. I can't even imagine what the chaos will be like when my baby's old enough to step in as well! It sounds like you have a healthy respect for food that you're passing on well.

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  8. I can relate to wanting my kids to have an appetite for healthy foods and be free from cravings... eating and preparing whole foods is surely a step in the right direction. Well done :)

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