Anonymous wrote:The pediatrician told me not to cook the kids a separate dinner so I don’t. A food psychologist talk that I went to also gave similar advice.
Sometimes I serve meals deconstructed where everyone can add what they want. Tonight I served a make your own taco bar and everyone picked their own toppings etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big mistake to do this OP. Picky eaters are made, not born.
Do not become a short order cook for your kids.
Only believed by a parent who did not actually have a picky child...
+1, people who think this way don't understand picky eating. They think it's like a kid saying they don't want to clean up their room, and that parents are just giving in instead of making them do it.
Real picky eating is like a kid who is afraid of cleaning their room because they worry something bad will happen if their clothes are in the hamper. Or a kid who wants to clean their room but their brain gets overwhelmed at the thought so even though they want to, they just don't. You can't "make" a picky eater eat a wider variety of foods. You can work to make food less scary and provide them with tools that will help them make food more approachable, but you can't just serve them spaghetti and tacos and stir fry every night until they give in and eat it. It won't happen (I know, I tried).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big mistake to do this OP. Picky eaters are made, not born.
Do not become a short order cook for your kids.
Only believed by a parent who did not actually have a picky child...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big mistake to do this OP. Picky eaters are made, not born.
Do not become a short order cook for your kids.
Only believed by a parent who did not actually have a picky child...
Anonymous wrote:Big mistake to do this OP. Picky eaters are made, not born.
Do not become a short order cook for your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Big mistake to do this OP. Picky eaters are made, not born.
Do not become a short order cook for your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Do you cook separate adult and kid meals? Mine are 5 & 7. I try to make sure there is one thing at every meal they both will eat but I don’t cook them their own dinner. Sometimes that means they don’t eat much. Is this typical?
Anonymous wrote:Of course not. When they were little and went to bed by 7pm they ate the previous night's leftovers for their earlier dinner at 5:30, but they were still eating the same thing we ate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No never. I might vary the way it’s prepared to suit tastes but we eat the same thing. For example we had spinach tortellini tonight in homemade Alfredo sauce. She doesn’t like vegetables mixed in but will eat them on the side. So I cooked the broccoli then put hers on the plate with the pasta, then mixed the broccoli in the pasta/sauce for my own because I like it like that.
+1
This is how I’ve always done it, one meal, sometimes a bit deconstructed.