Hey. Parents. Yes, you there – the one grating up a giant pile of carrots and capsicums and every other grate-able veggie on the planet, ready to smuggle into the pasta sauce you’re making for your kids.
I’ve seen you add pumpkin puree into muffins and I know that you hide veggies in fruit. I know that you tried to get the kids onto beetroot chips instead of Doritos without alerting them to the difference in substance; I know that you ended up surrendering and handing over whatever it is was the kids were screaming for at that particular moment in time.
You’re doing a good, honourable thing. You’re being a responsible parent by surreptitiously bringing peas into little Billy’s diet somehow – even if the method itself involves degrees of dishonesty, Billy needs those vitamins and nutrients and minerals somehow, and it’s not going to happen by him willingly eating peas.
And of course, Billy deserves a treat if he happily eats everything on the table. Right?
Wrong. Oh-so-very-wrong.
I’m so sorry to tell you, Parents, but apparently you’ve been going about things in the completely incorrect way.
According to Australian researchers, you’re actually doing a bad thing by rewarding kids with food when they do something good. Worst still – you’re actually screwing over your children by hiding their vegetables in their meals. By pureeing and chopping and grating and disguising those vegetables, you’re setting your kids up for a life of doomed eating.
Top Comments
I really think it depends on the child. The only vegetable my son will eat is corn, and even then, not willingly. Even fruit is a struggle and I swear he survives on a couple of biscuits and fresh air. I've found a pumpkin muffin recipe which he loves but everything else seems to be a struggle. Hence why veggie smuggling is so appealing. Don't get me wrong- we always put veggies on his plate to offer him the real deal but I doubt he has ever touched one to his lips.
In our house, you have to eat the good food in your dinner, usually veg or salad. If you don't eat that, you get plain cold weetbix for breakfast. If you don't eat that you get fruit and veg sticks for morning tea. If that doesn't get eaten you have a salad sandwich for lunch. Then fruit and veg sticks for afternoon tea. Then we are back to dinner where you have to eat your good food! Eventually they get hungry.
We have never had fights about it, that's just the way it is. Fast forward 9 years and I have three that eat most good things. You are allowed to have likes and dislikes, you just can't have a blanket ban on anything with nutrients in it. I myself refuse to eat mushrooms because I am firmly convinced they are the food of the devil.
The other thing that is surprisingly effective is to praise the kid who is eating them and not noticing that the other kids aren't. It's amazing how often that results in "look I'm eating my broccoli too!"