THE HERALD   EVERETT, WASHINGTON
HeraldNet on Facebook HeraldNet on Twitter HeraldNet RSS feeds
Welcome, Guest | Register | Sign In
 Home   Life        Follow HeraldNetLife on Twitter @HeraldNetLife   RSS feed RSS
Published: Monday, October 19, 2009

Recipes for teaching your kids to love food

  • This book cover released by Voice shows the cover of “Too Many Cooks-Kitchen Adventures with 1 Mom, 4 kids and 102 Recipes,” by Emiy Franklin.(AP Photo/Voice)**NO SALES**

    This book cover released by Voice shows the cover of “Too Many Cooks-Kitchen Adventures with 1 Mom, 4 kids and 102 Recipes,” by Emiy Franklin.(AP Photo/Voice)**NO SALES**

  • Hed goes here

    Hed goes here

  • This book cover released by Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing shows “Cookbook for The Lunch-Box Set,” by Paula Deen, Susan Mitchell, illustrator, and Martha Nesbit, contributor. (AP Photo/Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing)**NO SALES**

    This book cover released by Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing shows “Cookbook for The Lunch-Box Set,” by Paula Deen, Susan Mitchell, illustrator, and Martha Nesbit, contributor. (AP Photo/Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing)**NO SALES**

  • This book cover released by Wiley shows the cover of “The Gastrokid Cookbook: Feeding a Foodie Family in a Fast-Food World” by Hugh Garvey and Matthew Yeomans.(AP Photo/Wiley)**NO SALES**

    This book cover released by Wiley shows the cover of “The Gastrokid Cookbook: Feeding a Foodie Family in a Fast-Food World” by Hugh Garvey and Matthew Yeomans.(AP Photo/Wiley)**NO SALES**

A new group of books offers advice and recipes for parents to cultivate a genuine love of good food — not hiding the broccoli in the brownies — in their kids.

Though the books vary from almost scholarly to just a tad goofy, all take the same approach to combating the chicken fingers-and-pizza kid menu: Express your love of food to your kids. Don’t feed them separate meals. Expose them to new tastes and culinary experiences as often as possible. And for goodness’ sake, eat together.

“My Two-Year-Old Eats Octopus: Raising Children Who Love to Eat Everything” by Nancy Tringali Piho: It’s a lot to read on the subject — more than 300 pages — but if you’re bent on raising a gourmet, this is your Dr. Spock. Author Nancy Tringali Piho isn’t interested in getting your kids to eat spinach. Rather, this almost scholarly tome seeks to create well-rounded eaters who are open to the tastes and cultural experiences food offers.

“Too Many Cooks: Kitchen Adventures with 1 Mom, 4 Kids, and 102 Recipes” by Emily Franklin: This delightfully written memoir puts into practice what “Octopus” preaches. Novelist and former professional chef Emily Franklin chronicles her yearlong mission to introduce her four children to exotic foods from purple potatoes to curried goat. Franklin mixes tales of wonder, such as seeing Mommy “covered in goo” after smashing a coconut, with more than 100 recipes tested on her own kids.

“The Gastrokid Cookbook: Feeding a Foodie Family in a Fast-Food World” by Hugh Garvey and Matthew Yeomans: More than 70 “kid-tested, adult-friendly” recipes fill this book born from the authors’ disdain for children’s menus. A smattering of general advice — be satisfied when they try something new even if they don’t like it — precedes appealing recipes such as roasted chickpea bruschetta and Parmesan chicken cutlets.

“Paula Deen’s Cookbook for the Lunch-Box Set” by Paula Deen: Once your kids are interested in food, they might also be interested in cooking. “Paula Deen’s Cookbook for the Lunch-Box Set” offers more than 60 recipes for sleepovers, bake sales and, of course, the lunch box. Aimed at ages 7 through about 13, the book promotes cooking with family and friends.



Story tags » 

Cooking
Comments
NORTHSOUND ClassifiedsNORTHSOUND Classifieds
Top Jobs
Homes
Autos

HeraldNet highlights

Arson death haunts survivors
Arson death haunts survivors: 25 years later, family and comrades remember firefighter
Start thinking taxes now
Start thinking taxes now: Tips to pay what you must -- and no more
No more Mr. Nice Guy
No more Mr. Nice Guy: Mariners' Wedge plans to raise the bar
Snowshoes required
Snowshoes required: Jump at the chance to take guided excursion on Mount Baker