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7 Tips to Raising a Non-picky Eater

October 28, 2015~ EAT

 
 
 
 
Whenever I post these bento lunches or dinners I cook got my family, I get a lot of comments from people asking, “Your kids really eat this? How did you raise such non-picky eaters?” I didn’t realize they were non-picky eaters until these comments!
 
All of my kids are good eaters who will at least try a bite of something new, and I guess I’ve been taking it for granted?! So I’m sharing with you the rules or things I’ve implemented in my family that might have helped my kids be good eaters.
 
 
 
Sautéed mushrooms & cherry tomatoes in olive oil
Sea salt & garlic powder
Grapes picked fresh from our backyard the morning of
Butter, garlic & olive oil orzo pasta
Babybel cheese
Gushers
 
 
 

 

 
Steamed sweet potatoes
Roasted Brussels sprouts
1/2 a peach
Coconut chips
A chocolate coin
 
 

How to Raise a Non-picky Eater

  • We have a “3 thank-you bites” rule. Unless they find it too spicy or were allergic to it or some legit excuse like they just don’t want to eat a live, squirmy octopus, they need to take 3 thank-you bites as an appreciation to the person who cooked it, even if they don’t like it.

 

  • I am not a fan of kids menus at restaurants. It actually bothers me that they’re almost always the exact same menus such as chicken nuggets, chicken fingers, macaroni & cheese, or pizza! Not to mention they’re about $2-3 cheaper than an adult menu with way less of a portion and not even good food, so I usually have my kids share two adult meals between the 3 of them, or just have each of them order an adult menu and then take the rest home to eat as leftovers. “Why go out to eat if you’re going to get the same foods all the time at every restaurant?”, you can hear me saying once in awhile. That’s not to say they’ve never gotten a macaroni & cheese kids meal, I let them get it once in a blue moon but most of the time I have them order from the adult menu and they want to eat the same foods I am eating anyway!

 

  • I ate whatever I wanted while pregnant and while I was nursing. Except for monitoring the intake of seafood or a ton of junk food while I was expecting, since some seafood contain high levels of mercury that’s found to be harmful for your baby, and obviously, the less nutritious junk food isn’t good for the baby. I don’t drink alcohol, soda or smoke or eat raw meat, so those weren’t a problem for me to begin with. My personal theory is that when I’m nursing, different foods that I eat produce different tasting milk, thus introducing to the baby different flavors. And my babies weren’t colicky or gave me a reason to seriously worry about what not to eat, so I guess I was lucky.

 

  • I listened to my instincts when feeding my baby. Instead of reading an article on how you shouldn’t feed egg whites, peanut butter, fish, berries, or wheat and adhering to it without question, I trusted my intuition and if it felt okay, I ate it or fed it to the baby. Keep in mind- I solely breastfed my babies until they were at least 9 months old, some I went as long as 18 months. I didn’t feed my baby popcorn or grapes or things that they can choke easily, but fed them peanut butter, fish, egg whites, berries and wheat after they turned about 1.

 

  • I introduced them to a lot of variety of foods from different cultures after they initially started with rice cereal and poi(Hawaiian food that my husband said was one of the best things babies can eat), and baby foods of pureed fruits and vegetables. This is when they are curious, excited and the most open-minded about trying different kinds of foods! So take advantage of that trust and open-mindedness to have them try a variety!

 

  • “You don’t know if you’ll like it until you try it.” is a phrase I said to my kids until they now say it themselves while trying a new vegetable or something that doesn’t look very appealing because that’s of course true, how are you going to know you don’t like it if you haven’t even tried it? Unless it’s something way off your comfort zone like the live octopus I mentioned(Koreans love that stuff!), then you don’t have to try it. 
 
  • If you don’t like dinner, that’s too bad. If you don’t like the food I made for you, then you don’t get another option. If you found it too spicy, or the food is causing discomfort, then I’ll make something else for you, but those are the exceptions. My kids are not allergic to anything that we are aware of, so that’s not an issue for us either. You eat what me and dad eat and make for you, I am not going to make another meal for you because you’d rather eat macaroni & cheese(which I’ve only made for them once in their lifetime, my girls recently told me disapprovingly).

 

  • I continue to cook many different types of foods from different countries for dinner. My kids love oxtail soup & kimchi from Korea, fish balls & black bean paste from China, tamarind sauce from Thai, duck, raw fish, squid, octopus, oysters, mussels, to name a few. Introducing them to many different types of foods helps them to be open minded and adventurous with their food. 
 
 
I believe having these guidelines and rules have helped my kids to be non-picky eaters and by eating a variety of foods that each offer different nutrients and benefits, they are able to live a healthy life. 

How do you provide a healthy lifestyle for your family?


 

 

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TAGGED: korean recipe, recipes 7 Comments

i ♥ kimchi

October 22, 2010~ Etc.

i may be very americanized, but i do LOVE korean food with a passion! have you ever had korean b.b.q? bibimbap? then you know what i’m talking about!

so i’ve been craving kimchi lately so yesterday adi and i made some. i think i was about 8 yrs. old when i first made kimchi with my mom so adi’s way ahead of me by 5+ yrs. i think she’ll be a better cook than i am when she grows up!

this was my 3rd time making kimchi on my own and they say 3rd time’s the charm and i gotta say, they(whoever you are) are right. i could eat a bowlful of it just plain! haha is that gross?

so here is how you make kimchi. don’t be scared, it isn’t that bad!

you need:

•2 medium size napa cabbages and 1 Korean radish
•salt, sweet rice flour, sugar, water
•4- 6 cups of hot pepper flakes
•fish sauce, white onion, fresh garlic, ginger
•green onions, fresh oysters (both optional)

1. soak the napa cabbage in salt water overnight.
2. chop the radish in thin slices.
4. mix 1/2 c. sweet rice flour with 3 c. water. bring to boil. it should thicken like this.
then add 1/4 c. sugar and mix. let it cool.
5. mix 1 c. of fish sauce into the rice flour mixture.

6. blend together 1 onion, 1 c. garlic, 1- 1 1/2 T. ginger.

7. into the big bowl, pour the blended garlic/onion/ginger, 4-6 c. hot pepper flakes(depending on how spicy you want it), thinly sliced radish, and optional: 6 green onions and 2 c. frozen oysters).
*i put green onions in but not the oysters.

8. mix it all together. it should appear very red like this.

9. with gloves on, add the mixture on top of the cabbage, and in between every leaf.
you’ve now made kimchi!

to make another kind of kimchi called ggakduki/radish kimchi,

cut the radishes in cubes and soak in salt water for about 2 hrs.
then you mix it with the red paste mixture and you’re done!


let it sit in room temperature in closed container for about 2 days

and store it in the refrigerator.
happy friday everyone!
last day to enter the CSN giveaway!
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TAGGED: korean recipe 7 Comments

Kimchi Recipe

April 16, 2010~ Etc.

The first time I made kimchi, it failed. It wasn’t a good recipe to begin with(so ignore my first kimchi recipe for your own sake) and I didn’t let it sit in room temperature for 1-2 days but instead put it in the refrigerator right after the making.

My goal is to make the world’s best kimchi along with the world’s best pad-thai) so I attempted for the second time. I found this kimchi video here and it’s wonderful! While watching it I realized this recipe was very similar to the one my mom used and DUH! I should’ve known, I helped her make it many times in my childhood! I didn’t use leeks or oysters but used all the rest and it turned out great…EXCEPT this time I let it sit out for too long, darn it! I let it sit out for 1 1/2 days but I think just 1 day would’ve been suffice. So it’s a little too sour right now which is actually perfect for kimchi fried rice or kimchi soup, so I made kimchi soup with it and turned out delicious. And practice makes perfect and failure means your next result will only be better right?…..RIGHT? (you better be nodding! 😉

Kimchi Soup

1 1/2 C. sour kimchi
1/4 lb pork loin (more the better is my theory. Pork MAKES the kimchi soup.)
2 C. water
1 C. kimchi juice
1 sliced green onion
1 cup tofu (extra firm)

1 T. korean chili flakes (gochugaru)
1/2 T. korean chili paste (gochujang)
4 teaspoons soy sauce
1/2 teaspoon minced garlic
1/2 t. garlic powder
2-3 pinches of black pepper

1. Put 1 1/2 c. water in a pot to boil. In the meantime, in a pan coated with vegetable oil, fry the kimchi. Then trasnfer the kimchi to the boiling water and add pork, kimchi juice, chili flakes, paste, soy sauce, garlic, garlic powder and black pepper. Let it boil and then let it simmer for about 45-60 mins. About 10 mins. before serving, add tofu and a few mins. before serving, add the green onions.

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TAGGED: korean recipe, recipes 1 Comment

Stone Bowl Bibimbap

March 30, 2010~ Etc.

We make this AT LEAST once a month. Jay and I could eat this everyday and not get sick of it and is one of Jay’s top 5 favorite Korean foods. It seems like I say this all the time so let me clarify his top 5 in no particular order:

1. Stone Bowl Bibimbap
2. Kalbi (Korean ribs)
3. Bulgogi (Korean beef)
4. Samgyupsal(thick sliced bacon)
5. Samgaetang(chicken soup) AND Kkorigomtang(oxtail soup).
Don’t fret, I got 3 down, I will post the other 3 soon enough. 🙂

Stone Bowl Bibimbap
1. Heat up the stone bowl on medium high heat.
(optional) Put sliced up fresh garlic in the stone bowl with 1/2 T. olive oil and cook till brown and crisp. *This is just my special ingredient I add into it, I’ve never heard of anyone else doing this, but Jay absolutely loves it. You can hardly taste the garlic, it tastes very soft and mild when it’s cooked.

2. Put some rice in the bowl and pat it down so it’s even over the surface.

3. Cook the vegetables and meat all seperately. Season them with salt, pepper, and garlic powder as you cook them. Then add the cooked vegetables and meat on top of the rice. I put zuchini, spinach, mushrooms, sprouts, carrots, and samgyupsal(not shown). Most people put bulgogi or ground beef.

4. Cook the egg so that the whites are cooked while the yolk isn’t. This makes the mixing easier and gives it texture.

5. Mix Korean red paste with corn syrup and sesame seeds according to desire. You want the paste a little sweet but not too sweet. Add the paste to the rice mixture and also sesame oil and mix it all up and bon appetite! (Jay and I put fresh sliced cucumbers and romain lettuce in the end for a more fresh, crunchy taste

*The stone bowl will stay hot and cook the food as you eat. If you don’t have a stone bowl, just put rice in a big bowl and proceed the same method.
Stone Bowl Bibimbap
-Stone bowl(if you don’t have one, just use a bowl)
-*Thinly sliced garlic(optional)
-Vegetables such as carrots, mushrooms, spinach, sprouts, zuchinni all thinly sliced(except spinach).
-Eggs(1 per person)
-Red paste(mixed with corn syrup and sesame seeds)
-Sesame oil
-*Thinly sliced cucumbers and romain lettuce(optional)
1. Heat up the stone bowl on medium high heat.
(optional) Put sliced up fresh garlic in the stone bowl with 1/2 T. olive oil and cook till brown and crisp. *This is just my special ingredient I add into it, I’ve never heard of anyone else doing this, but Jay absolutely loves it. You can hardly taste the garlic, it tastes very soft and mild when it’s cooked.
2. Put some rice in the bowl and pat it down so it’s even over the surface.
3. Cook the vegetables and meat all seperately. Season them with salt, pepper, and garlic powder as you cook them. Then add the cooked vegetables and meat on top of the rice. I put zuchini, spinach, mushrooms, sprouts, carrots, and samgyupsal(not shown). Most people put bulgogi or ground beef.
4. Cook the egg so that the whites are cooked while the yolk isn’t. This makes the mixing easier and gives it texture.
5. Mix Korean red paste with corn syrup and sesame seeds according to desire. You want the paste a little sweet but not too sweet. Add the paste to the rice mixture and also sesame oil and mix it all up and bon appetite!

*The stone bowl will stay hot and cook the food as you eat.

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TAGGED: korean recipe 2 Comments

SamGaeTang Recipe

March 23, 2010~ Etc.

I decided I’ll post more Asian cooking recipes since we eat Asian food(mostly Korean) about 80% of the time for dinner. I don’t think anyone will complain about that. 🙂 Sorry for all you people out there, but Korean food really is the best food in the world. Okay, Thai food and Chinese and sushi comes very close. 🙂 Even Jay the China Irish man admits Korean food is better than Chinese, GASP~!!! Haha but there are some amazing Chinese dishes out there too, I gotta admit.

So don’t be afraid to try these recipes! I’ve always told people that cooking/baking isn’t hard at all, if you know how to read then you’re a cook! You just need a good recipe to be a good cook. Simple as that. And of course it requires some time, especially when it comes to Korean food. Every dish is really made with TenderLoveCare which I think is wonderful. My mom cooked every single night and I do too and it’s one of the greatest ways to show the family your love. I do apologize for not the most precise measurements of the ingredients since I cook from my head and make it up as I go and not by a recipe.

This is Jay’s top 5 favorite Korean food. 😉
SamGaeTang
1 Whole chicken
7-10 Garlic cloves
10 Dried dates*
2-3 Dried ginseng*
Salt & pepper to taste
1 C. green onions
*dried dates and dried ginseng can be bought at Asian markets. FYI: the dried ginsengs are quiet expensive, my mom brings me some from Korea and it’s about $100 a small bag. That’s why this is considered a gourmet food, a little pricey but very healthy and nutritious. If you don’t want to use ginseng, then just make it without, it’ll still taste good. 🙂
Fill a big pot with water and bring it to a boil. Put in a whole chicken, the water should be covering the entire chicken and some more. Throw in garlic, dates and ginseng. Bring it to a boil. Then turn the heat to medium heat and cover with a little opening in one corner. It should be boiling gently. Let it boil for 3 hrs. The meat should be very soft and it should be falling of the bones by touch. Poke at the meat with a fork and get all the meat out and throw the bones away. Don’t worry about getting all the small bones out.
Add salt and pepper to taste. Serve it with sweet white rice or white rice and top it with chopped green onions.
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TAGGED: asian cooking, korean recipe, recipes 3 Comments

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Hello! My name is Sarah and I am so happy to have you here! Here you'll find DIY sewing, DIY home building & decor, honest and vulnerable posts of motherhood and snippets of my family. We are building our dream house and will update you regularly on our whole process from start to finish and I am also starting a mother-daughter sewing series. So I hope you stay awhile!

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