Scottish Daily Mail

Secret trick to get your kids eating SPROUTS

- By Clover Stroud

Last Christmas Eve, in between wrapping presents and preparing a plate of mince pies and sherry for the man in red, I lovingly prepared a plate of Brussels sprouts, cooked with bacon and butter, to have with roast gammon. My six-year-old son, Dash, eyed the food suspicious­ly: ‘Mum, I am not eating that!’ I may as well have put poison in front of him and his siblings — Lester, four, Evangeline, eight, Dolly, 17, and Jimmy, 20.

Copying Dash, Lester pushed his plate away, too, whining that I am horrible for having cooked food with vegetables.

sprouts were this week voted the nation’s favourite green vegetable, according to a Waitrose study, but I’ve a suspicion they didn’t ask children. My eldest, Jimmy, loves them now, but it’s taken almost two decades to get to that point.

and it’s not just Christmas sprouts. My youngest three can be as fussy as the most demanding restaurant critic. they’ll eat mountains of pasta, cereal and toast, but broccoli has been judged ‘too green’, oranges rejected as ‘too tangy’, apples are ‘too hard’ and bananas ‘too fluffy’.

It’s a battle I’ve fought in vain, on and off, for 20 years. But while some weary parents give in to their young ones’ demands for a beige diet, I’ve one l ast trick up my sleeve — mind control.

No, not hypnosis, but a clever new system of training your kids to eat mindfully that’s been developed by researcher­s from Purdue University in the U.s. state of Indiana.

they found children as young as three were more likely to think about fruit and vegetables in a positive way if they did two things: first, played games with them (like the tray memory game, or a stop-go game with different-coloured veg for traffic lights) and secondly, snacked on them while concentrat­ing on what they looked, smelled and felt like.

Results have been encouragin­g. after 15 lessons in mindful eating, says lead researcher Prof essor sara schmitt, children l i ked veg more and had better self- control ( ie. spat i t out l ess) t han a group who didn’t get the lessons.

It’s not a snap-your-fingers Mary Poppins approach. ‘Children need to practise mindfulnes­s regularly in order to see its effects on self-regulati on,’ says Professor schmitt, explaining that her experiment took place over five weeks. But I’m preBEfoRE pared to do almost anything for family harmony at the festive table.

I go off to try her methods, Professor schmitt advises me to keep my expectatio­ns ageappropr­iate, suggesting I use props to first teach Lester and Dash some deep breathing exercises, which are important in mindfulnes­s. ‘Rocking an animal to sleep on a child’s belly can help children develop a greater understand­ing of and ability to concentrat­e on the breath,’ she says. I eye the hamster thoughtful­ly, but she means a soft toy, not a real one.

We start with one of the ‘lessons’ — making a salad together. In the research, it was an ambitious rocket and tomato salad dressed with olive oil, but we start with some humble cucumber chopping.

Dash has so much fun, we then graduate to making a mess of slicing tomatoes, which piques the interest of Lester, who has his head in a box of Lego. ‘It’s fun playing with food,’ he declares ten minutes later, though starts retching when I suggest he should try eating it.

Usually Dash won’t eat raw vegetables either, but he concedes to several pieces of cucumber and half a tomato, previously dismissed as ‘ too slimy’. this feels like a significan­t breakthrou­gh and I’m absolutely delighted, though do my best to mute it. Galvanised by t his early response, I decide to enlist Dash and Lester into helping me make a salad every evening, encouragin­g them to come up with ideas for it. While it can often be impossible for busy working mums to include the children in cooking — while simultaneo­usly testing spellings, advising on a-level coursework, and discussing university plans — a simple salad feels achievable.

Grating, I discover, is a very good game and leads to taste-testing of carrots and beetroot, occasional­ly dressed with a little grated finger. I even manage to get them to eat a bit of raw sprout in a basic coleslaw.

I start to feel smug, and turn to child nutritioni­st Charlotte stirlingRe­ed, weaning consultant to Joe Wicks, for a bit of psychologi­cal background on picky eaters like mine.

‘Picky eaters are more likely to want things that are plain and less likely to have a signature flavour,’ she says. ‘When trying to get children to eat more, parents often try things like distractio­n, but that takes away from the importance of eating. Mind

It’s the age-old conundrum — how to get fussy eaters to enjoy their greens. Now scientists say they’ve come up with the ...

fulness can help them to come back to viewing food as something that’s important.

‘Most children go through a phase of picky eating, but, it’s never too late to try to encourage fussy eaters to eat more.’

Just 18 per cent of UK children aged five to 15 eat their recommende­d five portions of fruit and veg a day, according to NHS figures, so many of us could benefit from techniques that work.

My smugness does not last long, however. Salad duty works on raw carrot but not, it turns out, on the cooked version. Trying to coax a tiny disc of it into Lester’s mouth produces the usual clamped-shut jaw, and when I present him with a minuscule f l oret of steamed broccoli, he gives me what can only be described as a look of fear and loathing.

I decide to try a new activity and put different fruit and vegetables on a tray in front of the boys. I ask them to describe each piece, smell it and really think about what it is. The next part of the game involves hiding the vegetables under a cloth and then getting the kids to remember what’s there, but the novelty wears off within minutes. The boys are happy to do it a few times to humour me, but then start running away every time the dreaded ‘veg tray’ is pulled out.

Instead, we try mindful eating itself, where you focus on the act of tasting and consuming different v e getables ‘in t he present moment’, really concentrat­ing on every sensory aspect.

Evangeline wants to play this and gets it quickly. I watch delightedl­y as her tolerance turns to desire for beans, broccoli, carrots and even a bit of spinach. Amazingly, she no longer calls anything ‘too spicy’ just because she doesn’t fancy it and is more aware of specific, individual tastes.

In the boys’ case, it’s more of an ongoing project, I fear — but one that’s showing definite promise. Overall, the amount of vegetables and fruit Dash and Lester are eating has increased. They are more willing to try different vegetables, even if it’s just a little bite, and I feel more confident about AbOvE putting it in front of them without provoking that dreaded retch.

all, what mindf ul ness has done, together with the saladmakin­g, is remove a mental block to the idea of eating vegetables. The default response to a runner bean is no longer ‘yuck!’, tears or a flat-out no.

but there are still certain limits. Cabbage. Courgette. Peas. How stressed should I be about them? Jimmy, 20, was just like his little brothers once, and now he wolfs everything down.

Yes, of course, we must try to help them eat healthily as little ones, but I’m sure they’ll get there.

Today at least, as they help me prepare a winter slaw, it feels like I’m winning. And as for that huge bowl of deliciousl­y buttered sprouts with bacon I’m planning for the main event tomorrow — I’m confident they’ll try a bite or two. They may not like them, but they’ll try them — that will do for now.

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 ??  ?? Taste test: Clover with Dash, six, Evangeline, eight and Lester, four
Taste test: Clover with Dash, six, Evangeline, eight and Lester, four

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