• View ecochildsplay’s profile on Facebook
  • View ecochildsplay’s profile on Twitter
  • View ecochildsplay’s profile on Instagram
  • View ecochildsplay’s profile on Pinterest
  • View Jennifer Lance’s profile on LinkedIn
  • View ecochildsplay’s profile on YouTube
  • View ecochildsplay’s profile on Google+

Eco Child's Play

Live a greener, healthier life!

  • Environment
  • Pregnancy
  • Food & Recipes
  • Health News
  • Parenting
  • Green Toys
  • Beauty & Beauty Products
  • Green Home & Cleaning
  • Contact

5 Benefits of Family Meals and Teaching Kids to Cook

ella's

Family meals are quickly disappearing from modern American culture.  With over-scheduled busy lives, little time or thought is put into what and when families eat.

From increasing social and emotional bonds to preventing obesity, there are so many benefits to family meals.  Hopefully these ideas will inspire you to come together as a family at meal time. The benefits are fruitful even when family meals occur only once or twice a week.

The Benefits of Family Meals and Teaching Kids to Cook

1.  Increased Conversation

While you are cooking with your child, it is great opportunity to discuss the day, to check in with one another, to extend your child’s spoken language ability.  Meal time is also perfect for true, meaningful conversation, assuming all tech gadgets and the television is off. The Family Dinner Project has lots of conversation starters if you find your meals silent.  They are even arranged by age.

2.  Prevents Obesity  

A new study this fall that found family meals are a protective factor against obesity, which is a growing epidemic amongst children in the United States.  According to Science Daily:

Family meals may be protective against obesity or overweight because coming together for meals may provide opportunities for emotional connections among family members, the food is more likely to be healthful, and adolescents may be exposed to parental modeling of healthful eating behaviors.

As noted by Dr. Berge, “Informing parents that even having 1 or 2 family meals per week may protect their child from overweight or obesity in young adulthood would be important.”

 3.  Teaches Important Life Skills

Learning to cook healthy meals is an important life skill. In today’s fast-paced busy life of families, eating meals is often on-the-go and not home-cooked.  Even when family meals occur at home, parents are rushed and don’t invite child participation.  This can be prevented by using healthy cookbooks for kids to inspire family meals.  For tweens and teenagers, you can assign them a night of the week to cook.  We have not yet implemented this in our home, but we plan to.  I have discussed with my daughter she can look on the internet or in our cookbooks for a recipe, then give me the ingredient list.  She loves to cook anyways, and this will free me one evening a week!

We were sent two cookbooks for children that inspired this post. The recipes are all kid-friendly and easy enough for children to make themselves with adult assistance, depending on their age.

  • [amazon_link id=”060062675X” target=”_blank” ]Ella’s Kitchen: The Cookbook[/amazon_link]
  • [amazon_link id=”0600628442″ target=”_blank” ]Ella’s Kitchen: The Big Baking Book: The Yellow One[/amazon_link]

Both of these cookbooks come from Ella’s Kitchen, makers of organic baby and toddler food. The recipes are super fun and kid-friendly, and they would inspire any family to prepare food and sit down together.

Paul Lindley set up Ella’s Kitchen because he passionately believed that his daughter Ella, along with her generation, should have the opportunity to eat better food and to discover that healthy food can be fun, tasty and cool. His eureka moment came just over ten years ago when he was desperately trying to wean his reluctant daughter.

Ella’s Kitchen try really hard to be good in every sense – not just through the good food they make, but also doing good stuff for the environment, and giving stuff back to local communities. They have done research with parents, little ones, psychologists and supermarkets to understand the very important role that all five of the senses play in developing healthy eating habits that last a lifetime.

I love 10% of profits from Ella’s Kitchen goes to their foundation aiming to help children have access and a positive relationship with healthy food.

There are several recipes I can’t wait to try with my family.  They include:

  • Creamy coconut rice pudding with chunky mango sauce
  • Mmmmoussaka (minus the lamb)
  • The Melty One
  • Full-of-beans lentil loaf
  • Cloudy pear merinque

These cookbooks have great photos of the food, as well as children eating the food. Allowing your children to look through them to find recipes for family meals will ensure success.  A family that cooks together will return to this activity even once children are grown and leave home.

When college comes around, kids often do not have the skills to feed themselves in a healthy, affordable manner because they never learned to cook. If they are taught while still in your home, you can influence their choices and inspire them to cook for their friends which will surely impress!  Then when they visit you, they can cook for you and share new recipes!

4. Improved nutrition eating. less picky

When children are involved in cooking, they see the ingredients that go into the food. There is no mystery. They don’t wonder what mom might be hiding in that dish.   If you have a picky eater, like I myself was and my son is, each new meal can be a cause for hesitation or downright refusal to eat.  When children help make food, they are excited to try it. They had a hand in it, especially if they chose the recipe.  It’s a similar effect as when children are involved in gardening they are more likely to eat fresh vegetables.

5. Teaches math and reading

 There is no better way to learn fractions than by cooking!  It is real life math!  Cooking also is great for estimation practice. Do you have enough ingredients? Did you make enough?  How big a piece of pie do we each get?   When children follow along with recipes, they learn to read in a practical manner.  I also find my son now reading labels on packaged food!  Creating grocery lists is excellent literacy activity, as well as budgeting for a meal. There are so many real life lessons involved in cooking!

[amazon_enhanced asin=”060062675X” /][amazon_enhanced asin=”0600628442″ /]

  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Pinterest
  • Print
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • More
  • WhatsApp
  • Tumblr
  • Reddit
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Subscribe!

« Is soy safe to eat? What are the benefits? What are the risks?
Create fun images with Fotor online photo editor! »

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Search Content

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter


About Eco Child’s Play

Our ethos is to provide news, information, and opinions on natural, green parenting to help your family live a greener, healthier life! Additionally, we offer personal consulting services to help you achieve your green living goals.

Jennifer is a vegetarian, yoga teacher, gardener, hiker, teacher, and mother that has been living off-the-grid for over 20 years.

Contact Eco Child’s Play

AspenClean: Premier Cleaning Products & Service for the Eco-Conscious

Naturally Clean Appliances with PurTru All-Natural Cleaners

More from the archives!

Need a Good Laugh? Yahoo Answers the Real Reason We Chose Home Birth

American Chemical Industry Blocks Senate Vote to Ban BPA

Adventures in Slow Cooking: Vegetarian Split Pea or Lentil Soup Recipe

Does Your Child Go to America's Greenest School?

Stranger Slaps Toddler to "Shut her up!"

Vegan Creamy Cauliflower Tahini Bisque

Uniquely Scented, Soothing Hand Sanitizer with Integrity: New Vegan PlaneAire Hands with Aloe and Green Tea

Information

  • About & Contact
  • Archive
  • Blog
  • Consulting Services
  • Disclaimer, Disclosure, & Sponsored Posts
  • Privacy Policy

Mother's Milk: Nurturing a Breastfeeding Mother, or Nursing for New Dads

"Righteous Eating" Feeding Into Eating Disorders

5 Ways for Parents to Travel Green

Insufficient Sleep & Decreased Quality of Life: No Teen Screen Time Before Bed!

Book Review: Firestorm

Popular Categories

  • Breastfeeding
  • Health News
  • Natural Childbirth
  • Parenting
  • Education
  • Product Review
  • Green Toys

Get our posts via email

Please stay in touch!

You might also like to read…

Simple Dessert: Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cake

Green Toy Giveaway Winner: Natural Pod Wooden Boat and Stairs

Save the Earth Science Experiments: Book Review

Initiation of Breastfeeding by the Breast Crawl

More Thoughts on the Thomas the Tank Engine Lead Paint Recall: Children Around the World Should Be Protected

Copyright © 2021 · Divine theme by Restored 316

Copyright © 2021 · Divine Theme On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.