The Palm Beach Post
By Associated Press   |  Dining, Fast food, Health, Kid-friendly meals, Low calorie, Recipes  |  October 07, 2009

Television and peers can trump parents when it comes to influencing what children eat, but that doesn’t mean families can’t fight back.

A Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health study found that parents have waning influence over what their kids eat. But it also found that the best defense is to start teaching healthy eating habits early.

Adopting common-sense approaches at home can help:

First, be careful about forbidding certain foods. A good/bad approach often makes less healthy foods more attractive. It also limits children’s ability to develop the skills they need to make their own healthful food choices.

Second, quantity matters. The more foods children try, the more likely they will find healthy ones they enjoy.

Give them the option of turning down a new dish as long as they give it a try. The empowering option of refusal often results in a “Hey, I like this,” experience.

Third, make healthier foods seem like exciting treats. A colorful fruit salad, homemade whole-grain cookies and English muffin pizzas made with low-fat cheese are all fun foods that can provide your child with valuable nutrients.

Finally, you can always fight fire with fire. These Parmesan-crusted chicken fingers have all the flavor and appeal of the greasy fast-food classic, but are baked using an “oven-frying” technique that uses hardly any oil.

Adding Parmesan cheese and tangy Dijon mustard to crunchy, Japanese-style bread crumbs (panko) gives these easy-to-prepare chicken fingers a sophisticated coating the whole family will enjoy.

Look for panko bread crumbs in the Asian section of your market. For even more kid appeal, serve the chicken fingers with a homemade honey mustard sauce, or a sweet-and-sour sauce made from apricot jam, cider vinegar, salt, pepper and a drop of hot sauce.

Time: Start to finish: 35 minutes

One Response to “The skinny: Start early to teach kids healthy eating”

  1. Here’s a tool to fight back. I’ve just released a parody coloring book about Where the Wild Things Are only this book is called Where The Sugar Sneaks Are. It’s available at http://www.solvingkidseating.com This book helps young kids learn to say No to the sugar snacks.

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