The Daily Telegraph

Would you ‘Deliveroo’ the kids’ dinner?

As time-pressed parents get gastro kids’ meals delivered to their door, Rosa Silverman tries them out on her own fussy eaters

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Six o’clock in the evening is the hour I like to call feeding time at the zoo. Not an actual zoo, you understand, rather my kitchen – the biggest difference being that the animals at the zoo don’t turn their noses up every time they’re fed. My four-yearold son says “no” to just about every meal I put in front of him, unless I happen to serve one of the two he’ll deign to eat: cheese on toast, or pasta with tomato sauce.

His two-year-old sister will devour almost everything in sight, and what doesn’t make it into her mouth will be merrily smeared across her face, the walls, the furniture and the floor. But getting my son to touch his food is like trying to coax a cat to stand up and perform a jig. It’s just not going to happen.

So when I heard about Wild Child Kitchen, the latest in a rising number of food delivery services for little ones, I was intrigued. Could their promise of “colourful dishes influenced by cuisines from around the world” transform my own two’s mealtime misbehavio­ur? I don’t know many toddlers who request lentil ragu or lamb and sultana meatballs with quinoa for supper, but if there’s a way to steer kids away from beige banquets and towards nutritiona­lly balanced food early on, that can’t be a bad thing.

Though our awareness of the importance of our children’s dietary needs has increased, the time we can devote to cooking them delicious and nutritious homemade meals every night of the week has diminished: the number of working mothers with dependent children in England has grown by more than a million in the past two decades, ONS figures showed last year, meaning that almost 75per cent of women with young children are in full-time or part-time work.

On top of our busier work schedules, modern mums now want to know where their food comes from, what it contains and whether it’s sustainabl­y packaged. It’s into this gap between our high aspiration­s yet lack of time to properly manage our children’s diets that food delivery services such as Wild Child Kitchen have appeared, aiming to provide what many of us can’t or won’t: healthy homemade meals for children that cater to our concerns about provenance and ingredient­s, delivered direct to our homes.

For families who rely on the likes of Ocado for the rest of their shopping, it’s the obvious next step – not least since research earlier this year published by the journal Public Health Nutrition found that half of the food now bought by UK families is “ultraproce­ssed”. Our growing reliance on factory-made products, from sugary cereals to reconstitu­ted meat, is higher than any other country in Europe, in spite of the fact a recent study of the eating habits of 105,000 adults undertaken by researcher­s at the Sorbonne found a link between high consumptio­n of such foods and elevated risk of cancer.

The brainchild of Natasha Lee, a 29-year-old former City worker turned entreprene­ur, Wild Child Kitchen, which offers individual meals from £4 to £6, or threemeal bundles from £20, seeks to encourage “a healthy curiosity in children about what they eat and where it comes from”. There’s no denying their offerings – sweet potato gnocchi, ratatouill­e and borlotti bean pasta stew and jammy chia slices – are a world away from the turkey dinosaurs and potato smileys that primary school-aged kids would likely pick out for themselves.

“I’d become interested in health and wellness and I couldn’t understand why so much was being spent on fixing problems retrospect­ively rather than fostering healthy habits in childhood,” says Lee when I ask what gave her the idea. Although not a parent herself, Lee was shocked by the UK’S child obesity rates – a third of two- to 15-year-olds are overweight or obese – and had watched as her busy friends had children and struggled to feed these children good food. “They didn’t want to use the normal supermarke­t brands and were worried about ingredient­s,” she says, a fair concern, given Kellogg’s Froot Loops cereal, a firm family favourite, contains 41per cent sugar (the company last year promised to cut the amount in its three top-selling children’s cereals in the UK by 20-40per cent).

“I said, ‘if we could cook fantastic, sustainabl­y sourced, fresh food and deliver it to your house, would that help?’ The answer was ‘yes’.”

Set up in a small rented kitchen in Battersea in the summer of 2016, Lee’s business has delivered 80,000 chilled and frozen meals around the capital since it launched, including to nurseries and schools as well as households, and has plans to extend its reach beyond London.

Her other philosophy is that children’s food need not be a whole separate genre to that of adults. “My father is Malaysian, and in the East we don’t really have this concept of children’s food,” she says. “The kids eat what the adults are eating and just have it without salt or sugar. Overly ‘kiddifying’ kids’ food so it doesn’t look like the original is quite a Western thing.”

To that end, there is no “allsinging, all-dancing packaging” around her food, and no cartoon characters. “It’s all about the food itself. We can tell you, for instance, where our fish comes from and who scaled it, and that’s something [people increasing­ly want to know].”

So how will it fare with my own fussy eater, who notably prefers to see Thomas the Tank Engine on his yogurt pots than informatio­n about the yogurt’s sustainabi­lity? I try him on some Wild Child Kitchen rainbow dahl and rice (priced at £4) and apple and cinnamon energy balls (£3.75).

“I’ll eat the meatballs,” he offers, picking up an energy ball. And he does eat them, because he likes sweet things, and at least this time it’s not a gingerbrea­d man or a slice of toast and jam. He doesn’t manage much of the rest, but then, that’s par for the course. Perhaps he just needs more time to learn to love quinoa.

Still, if he’s yet to become the “little foodie” the company targets, the demand among busy parents for healthy food deliveries for children is growing. Wild Child Kitchen was only covering four south-west London boroughs until January; now it covers the whole of the capital and has brought on board a health coach and nutritioni­st, and a handful of other companies have sprung up to provide similar offerings.

Piccolo Plates sells “nutritious and delicious homemade child-friendly dishes delivered straight to your door”, while Ratatouïe exists likewise “to help every family eat well, grow strong and live more by putting fresh wholesome, delicious meals on their table in minutes”.

COOK, which has 87 shops around the UK, also does a children’s range.

“As much as people want to cook, they don’t always have the time,” says Lee.

“We are the generation that’s pushed the boundaries of our expectatio­ns around the sourcing of food, what goes into it and its quality, and as we become parents we’re wanting that for our kids.”

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 ??  ?? Healthy habits: Rosa Silverman tries Wild Child Kitchen on her children, left; Beef Bolognese and Haddock Fish Cakes, below
Healthy habits: Rosa Silverman tries Wild Child Kitchen on her children, left; Beef Bolognese and Haddock Fish Cakes, below
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