Table of Contents
“I Love You” Salad
Kids are notorious for avoiding salads. I don't know if that reputation is warranted, statistically speaking — but that is completely irrelevant if your kid refuses to try that raw goodness. My kids love salads (even the veggie phobic one, funnily enough), but like it even better if I make “I love you” salad. That basically involves cutting a lot of salad veggies into heart shapes.

You can do the same thing to boiled eggs, by squashing an peeled boiled egg into a square (like a small Tupperware container) for a while, and pushing into the top with a barbecue skewer. Again, slice the egg, and you'll have hearts. Cheese can be cut into “kisses” — X and O shapes — with shaped cookie cutters.
Hint: This one doesn't work on teenagers or tweens. The hearts will probably make them throw up.
Veggie Soup
One friend recently told me about a kid who hates broccoli, but loves broccoli soup. Cream soups don't give away their original contents to unsuspecting little vegetable avoiders. Broccoli is a very healthy example, but you can easily do the same with carrot, mushroom, pumpkin, pea, tomato and onion soups. Make sure your kid doesn't watch while you prepare the soup, because they'll refuse to eat the treat they previously loved if they find out what is in there. If your kids are anything like mine, they'll even retroactively claim to have hated the soup they gulped up happily the entire time.
Egg Salad + Veggies
My kids love egg salad with (home-made) mayonnaise. They'll still gladly eat it if I chop spring onions up, grate carrots, and add parsley. Water cress, which kids can grow themselves, is a favorite addition to egg salad in the UK, and a combination that does very well in sandwiches. If you are already making an egg and cress sandwich, it may be easier to also add sliced tomatoes, and even grilled veggies. Zucchini, eggplant and onions are all great for grilling, as well.
Healthy Pizza
What kid doesn't like pizza? You may like to try to exploit the love of pizza by using large portobello mushrooms as pizza bottoms, and adding your obligatory tomato sauce, onions and cheese on top. If you use cheese royally, it may even take a while for a young child to understand the bottom is made out of mushroom. Does that not work? No worries. Just use wholegrain flower instead, or add plenty of veggies on top. Getting your kids involved in the manufacturing process is guaranteed to offer success, because they'll want to eat what they've made.
Pasta
Pasta may not be the healthiest thing to eat on a daily basis, but it contains lots of carbohydrates — the body's main source of energy. Pasta has two other redeeming qualities. Most kids are very happy to eat pasta, and it can be dressed up with all kinds of vegetables. One favorite in our house is paste with stir-fried carrots, broccoli, sundried tomatoes, and a decent amount of cream cheese. On top, we grate parmezan and.... very dark chocolate! It's hard for most children to refuse to eat something that contains chocolate, and I have to say that this dish is amazingly tasty.
Muffins
Home-made muffins can be a great breakfast solution that you can have ready in about 20 minutes. Take any basic savory muffin recipe, and add stuff like sundried tomatoes, grated carrots, zucchini, onions, nuts and raisins, garlic... anything you want, really. Your kids will probably be really happy to get muffins for breakfast and won't notice the vegetables.
- Photo courtesy of bunchesandbits on Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/bunchesandbits/4879437270
- Photo courtesy of wendycople on Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/wendycopley/2585111474
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