With families eating out less and spending more time at home, we have a golden opportunity to make healthy eating fun! Time spent now learning new ways to cook and eat could have lifelong benefits for everyone in your family: healthier hearts, lower risk of cancer and stroke, weight loss, enhanced moods, better sleep and more robust immune systems.
Besides better health, sharing a meal fosters healthy development in children. Preparing and eating meals together is an important ritual in family life. Like many rituals, family mealtime creates a sense of belonging, taking time to talk and learn as well as to eat. Planning meals together is an opportunity to talk about healthy habits. Cooking can teach teamwork. Measuring ingredients helps kids practice their math skills. And when you sit down together to a satisfying meal, it’s time for the screen-free conversation and listening to each other that builds children’s language and thinking skills.
Variety is the spice of life—it’s also key to making meals flavorful, interesting and nutritional. Here’s what a healthy plate looks like according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture:
Mealtime can be family team time: collaborative, conversational and the highlight of your family’s day.
Prepare a wholesome quarantine meal together
Preparing a healthy meal together offers a smorgasbord of benefits. And by helping to make a meal, your child may try new foods and discover new favorites.
Sonya Islam, one of our registered dietitians, shares her favorite recipes for families in quarantine. From salads to smoothies, all are wholesome, delicious, easy to make and easily altered for your family’s tastes. CHoR challenges you to prepare one, or all six, of these delicious meals together as a family. Your taste buds will thank you.
Try a new fruit and veggie
Bodies need vitamins, minerals, fiber and phytochemicals to grow up healthy, and fruits and vegetables are loaded with them. But as all parents know, convincing kids to eat them isn’t always easy. In this challenge, encourage your child to try one new fruit and one new vegetable this week. Be prepared: it may take several tries, but don’t give up!
One trick for getting new fruits and veggies into your child’s diet is empowerment. Tell your child that the family is going to try one new fruit and vegetable every week, and they get to pick! Another is to prepare them in new ways—again, with the help of your child—as children often refuse foods on the grounds of color, odor and texture. You may find your child is an undercover fan of broiled, boiled, roasted, sautéed, steamed, stir-fried or baked veggies! Introduce chopped fruits as a tasty topping for cereal or blend frozen fruit, vegetables and low-sugar yogurt into a yummy, nutritious shake. See more tips for adding fruits and vegetables to your child’s diet.
Make dinner conversations fun
It happens in every family. Whether picky eaters or it’s just been a long day, time together at dinner isn’t always easy. To change the mood, try a game to get everyone laughing and connecting. Here are a few to try.
When life gives you lemons …
Research has shown that children learn most health-related behaviors from the adults around them. Parents who model resilience, healthy diets and exercise habits tend to pass them on to their children for life. The pandemic may have given us lemons, but teaching your child optimal eating habits could be the best (and healthiest!) lemonade you’ve ever made.