Finding healthy versions of "normal" kid friendly foods.
ScottyT67203
Posts: 42 Member
in Recipes
I am a single dad with a son with Down Syndrome. I am trying to find recipes that are both low cal for me and good for us but I consider normal foods that he will eat.
I have done numerous searches and so much is healthy, but even though its for picky kids, I know he will not eat it.
I'm looking for good websites or even cookbooks specifically. He likes Mexican, pizza, burgers, hot dogs, you know... Normal kid stuff.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
I have done numerous searches and so much is healthy, but even though its for picky kids, I know he will not eat it.
I'm looking for good websites or even cookbooks specifically. He likes Mexican, pizza, burgers, hot dogs, you know... Normal kid stuff.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
6
Replies
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Make your own pizza so you can go lighter on the toppings. Mexican is easy, just use low fat meat and less cheese. Use 85/95% burger patties.
Check skinnytaste.com, they have a tasty recipe for chicken nuggets.0 -
There are some great friendly recipes on skinny taste.com0
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ScottyT67203 wrote: »I am a single dad with a son with Down Syndrome. I am trying to find recipes that are both low cal for me and good for us but I consider normal foods that he will eat.
I have done numerous searches and so much is healthy, but even though its for picky kids, I know he will not eat it.
I'm looking for good websites or even cookbooks specifically. He likes Mexican, pizza, burgers, hot dogs, you know... Normal kid stuff.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
You can make all those things in lower calorie versions.
Make pizza using a wrap as the base, serve it with a side salad for yourself. Burgers you can make with turkey mince, chicken sausages to do hot dogs.
Add him a little bit of the salad and side veggies, encourage him to eat them with you, make them exciting for him and he will soon want to try them.0 -
Home made pizza where he puts the toppings on.
Shish Kababs. Also try fruit shish Kababs with marshmallows and chocolate.
Assemble yourself tacos are fun and healthy. Have tomato slices, onion, and shredded lettuce out. Greek Yogurt instead of sour cream. The messier the better.
Cauliflower tots.
http://gimmedelicious.com/2014/07/24/skinny-baked-cauliflower-tots/0 -
I make my own pizza at home. And while it's not a "light" version, it is healthier than frozen or take out.
I find using a thinner crust cuts some calories, also use less cheese (can't do light or low fat cheese on pizza, wouldn't be right) and extra lean ground beef (instead of pepperoni). I have my slice(s) with a large spinach side salad w/low cal dressing and serve my SO and daughter fries with theirs.
For burgers, I do extra lean ground beef patties, with minimal spices (spices can be deadly w/SO's Chron's) and we grill them on the bbq. You can serve them on lettuce or even pita bread instead of buns. My daughter doesn't like buns so she just eats hers plain.0 -
Make turkey burgers and grate squash,onions bell peppers etc. use low carb buns or just use one bun shredded lettuce. My 9 yr old luv this. We also make turkey meatballs like this. Sides can be sweet potato fries1
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OK, I apologize, I wasn't clear... I'm sorry.
I do those things already, just want NEW recipes, not fancy chef dishes.
Thank you though for the responses.0 -
paulieboy113 wrote: »There are some great friendly recipes on skinny taste.com
Agree 100%!! skinnytaste.com is awesome!0 -
I'd think any finger food would be a winner.
My friend who raised four of her own children and many foster children as well (specializing in children with eating issues), brings the children in to the kitchen and welcomes creativity.
Her adult daughter confided that the family's favourite menu is "Yellow Dinner". These days a grandchild on their special day, gets to call the menu and grandma makes it. So I was happy enough to be there to witness "Yellow Dinner". All the menu items are yellow. It includes fries, chicken nuggets, and corn.0 -
If a grocery store sells Quorn products where you live their "chicken" nuggets (meat free protein) taste just like McNuggets. They come frozen so they're a perfect last minute meal.0
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hmm, I just feed my kids whatever we are eating, so that it becomes normal food to them.
Does he have texture issues? Or just really likes having a few familiar things to eat, not variety? Are you trying to expand his palate to healthy foods?
Most kids love black olives, those have good fats.
Chili is REALLY easy to hide lots of vegetables in.
Make vegetable and meat stock and put it in the freezer, or buy some, that gives you an easy start for soups - the pasta in alphabet shapes makes any soup acceptable for most kids I have encountered, so maybe buy a box of that and throw it into anything he might find questionable.
Those baby carrots. Some kids love those, and also baby corn, you can get that in cans.
My kids like the frozen bagged fruits a LOT, the mixed pineapple/mango, or sliced strawberries, or triple berry. These make really quick desserts.
Oddly, they also really loved raw sliced turnips with ranch dressing. I don't quite get it, but they really love that.
Crackers, whole wheat crackers with an assortment of toppings.
Hard boiled eggs.
Good luck to you, I know that it is a challenge raising special needs kids, and a challenge raising kids alone. I hope you are doing ok, please take some time for yourself when you can, even 20 minutes.1 -
First off Cheers to you and all single Dad's out there stepping up. I use this quite a bit.
http://www.superhealthykids.com/ I have a 6 year old diva who eats very little. She is also very active with t-ball, soccer and baton so I try to fuel her with good stuff since I know she is only going to eat tiny portions. Good luck!!!
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I mostly feed my kids what I eat, but there are some things that I know they won't touch. The skinny taste arroz congri is great. It's my 3 year old's favorite food even with the peppers and onions in it. My 5 year old really only likes it in a burrito. We go through quite a few meals in soft tacos....My kids seem to think everything is good as long as it's in taco form.
One thing I like to do is to layer tortillas with either salsa or spaghetti sauce and cheese. I usually do 2-3 tortillas. Then you bake at 350 for about 20 minutes either either eat them as normal pizzas (spaghetti sauce) or mexican pizzas (cheese). The calories aren't bad if you pair yours with veggies.0 -
ScottyT67203 wrote: »I am a single dad with a son with Down Syndrome. I am trying to find recipes that are both low cal for me and good for us but I consider normal foods that he will eat.
I have done numerous searches and so much is healthy, but even though its for picky kids, I know he will not eat it.
I'm looking for good websites or even cookbooks specifically. He likes Mexican, pizza, burgers, hot dogs, you know... Normal kid stuff.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Watch portion sizes. Pair with vegetables or fruits. Make thin crust pizza. Switch to whole grains. Bake or grill not fry.
All those things are not really unhealthy. You can make lower calorie versions but I know my particular dd pretty much likes one version and can tell if I change the recipe. She stopped eating homemade pizza forever because she didn't like it one time.
If your kid eats a limited amount of stuff maybe focus on adding things to meals instead of changing things he really likes.
My dd will eat vegetables in soup or pasta sauces. She likes minestrone.
Budget Bytes has many recipes that my family has enjoyed. http://www.budgetbytes.com/recipes/0 -
Purple monster smoothie. Most kids will try anything with cool name. I second the fruit kabobs. Breakfast for dinner. Grilled cheese with different kinds of cheeses and ham/turkey/roast beef. Crock-Pot cheesy chicken & tater tots. Baked potato bar with different toppings. That's just on top of head.0
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Forgot! Sloppy joes0
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My kids love raw veggies. I mix it up sometimes on the "dips". I use peanut butter, almond butter or hummus. Also smoothies aka shakes to kids.0
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I look at other friends diaries too for ideas. I usually feed my kids the same things at mealtime with maybe more fruit or some carb that I'm not eating.0
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Try mixing ground Turkey and lean hamburger for using in spaghetti sauce, taco meat, even a Hamburger helper! I do it, even to just stretch the meat and no one in my family notices.0
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You stated he likes pizza, so he might like these
Zucchini Pizza Bites from the Delish website
I don't use Pepperoni though, I prefer other kinds of meats on top, just depends on what is your favorite topping.
These are easy to log into MFP and are quite filling. Just try to find a low carb Marinara Sauce as it doesn't really take much at all. He might actually like the fact that they are "mini pizzas" just for him
Here is the recipe and a picture from their site:
Zucchini Pizza Bites
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My toddler actually loves kale chips - and when we served them at a picnic, the 4 and 5 year old guests liked them too.0
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Have you tried Pinterest? I don't bother with other recipe sites anymore. So many interesting ideas from every imaginable source and all with pictures.0
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Our goal with our three boys was to expand the idea of what kid friendly meant. We were fortunate, we had the opportunity to travel and also living in a major metropolis we have access to pretty much anything. So our kids would rather go out for dim sum, sushi, Ethiopian, Indian vs a chain like Olive Garden or Cheesecake Factory.
Now that said, to ensure they can be like the some of their friends we make some typical kids foods: pizza using pita (they love feta and spinach), pastas, risottos, gnocchi, wraps (grilled chicken and cheese), tacos or quesadilla (corn tortilla and cheese, bean or chicken, avocado), we will have a burger occasionally, I do make ribs for them, vegetarian chilli (can add to nachos), soups (kids love a dinner or borscht and perogies)...and lots of fruits and veggies...lots of salads. And of course eggs! Omelettes, frittatas, wraps, Mcmuffjns, scrambled with cheese....0 -
Deceptively Delicious is a great cookbook with new spin on kid favorites. Chickpea chocolate chip cookies, macaroni and cheese with pureed veggies, brownies with spinach(make sure they are cooled before eaten because the spinach flavor will go away). You could also either puree veggies and add them to spaghetti sauce or chop them up and add them to the sauce.
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My kids tend to like all the "kid" foods too. In addition to the ones you mentioned mine really like having grilled cheese with tomato soup, fish sticks with macaroni, butter noodles with Parmesan cheese, and breakfast for dinner. I always give them a fruit and try to incorporate a vegetable where I can (raw carrots, sugar snap peas, frozen shelled peas (still frozen we call them pea Popsicles when they are frozen together in lumps of ice), corn and edamame are the ones they eat without complaining.
I've also had good luck with stir fry - although they are a little iffy on the sauces. I cook the chicken and vegetables in the pan and pull a little of those out for the kids and give it to them with plain white rice, then I add in the curry sauce or whatever and give them a small ramekin of that as well to try. Some of them they like (peanut coconut curry chicken and butter chicken with naan bread) most they just eat the plain stuff.
Most of our family dinners are pretty traditional though - a meat (they like chicken and pork tenderloin the best), a starch (mashed potatoes, rice or a box pasta side) and a vegetable (fruit for them as a backup to veggies like zucchini and asparagus). They don't eat a lot regardless so I'm not too worried about feeding them the regular kid food, it's more important for me to get cals in them than to expand their palates to exotic flavors.0 -
Might sound very odd but homemade chicken nuggets with salsa if he likes Mexican. Chicken breast (or thigh) cut up into chicken nugget style pieces. Use egg white to paste. Then either homemade bread crumbs or pre-made. Add enchilada or taco seasoning (just a dash to each) and either bake with the salsa on top or use as dipping sauce. If you bake with the salsa on top add a dash of shredded pepper jack cheese for extra flavor at the last few minutes in the oven.0
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