USA TODAY International Edition

Meal services may solve kids’ meal scramble

Subscripti­ons help parents and their picky eaters

- Rebekah Tuchschere­r

Cooking is the absolute last thing Amanda Hengesbach wants to do when she gets home after work.

A 31- year- old single mom, Hengesbach works 40 hours each week at a senior living home. She says the days are long, and she’d rather spend quality time with her 5- year- old son and 3year- old daughter than 45 minutes making dinner.

That’s why she subscribed to Yumble, a subscripti­on meal service that delivers pre- made, kid- friendly meals to her doorstep once a week. A quick zap in the microwave, and the mom of two has a meal ready for her children in minutes.

“It was a self- care thing,” Hengesbach said of subscribin­g to Yumble three months ago. “After working all day, I don’t want to work more. I just want to spend time with my kids.”

Subscripti­on meal delivery services for kids are ramping up for the back- toschool season as parents like Hengesbach search for kid- friendly lunches and dinners that don’t require time in front of a hot stove or scrambling to find a substitute for peanut butter sandwiches at nut- free schools.

Online subscripti­ons have skyrockete­d

The online subscripti­on market grew from $ 57 million to $ 2.6 billion from 2011 to 2016, according to a 2018 study by McKinsey & Company, a management consulting firm.

The month- by- month model has attracted a large breadth of companies, including Nike recently with its subscripti­on service for kids’ shoes.

Some offer meal kits, while others have capitalize­d on beauty products, dog treats, books and even shaving products. However, more than onethird of shoppers who sign up for subscripti­on services cancel within three months, and more than half cancel within six months.

Such companies as Yumble and Nurture Life differentiate themselves from the subscripti­on meal kit industry by offering foods specifically for children, rather than young adults hoping to avoid grocery store lines or to simplify meal prep.

“Most meal kits are a hobby or a funto- do for young couples or parents – but it’s still an activity,” Joanna Parker, cofounder of Yumble said.

“Yumble is fully prepared, and it’s solving a pain that parents have day after day. Children have to eat every single day, and it can be a huge time suck for parents to get the ideas, concepts and all the ingredient­s in the house.”

Peas are for picky eaters

Laura Maulton’s youngest daughter has autism, which can make finding healthful foods with the right textures difficult for the 37- year- old mom from St. Simons, Georgia.

“One week, she’ll eat nothing but chicken nuggets,” Maulton said.

“And the next week, she won’t touch them.”

Maulton ordered her first box in June, and plans to resubscrib­e as she returns to 40- to 60- hour weeks in her kindergart­en classroom in August. While she’s tried meal kits from HelloFresh, she said they’re just not as kid- friendly or easy to use.

Yumble and Nurture Life work similarly to other popular meal kit services, such as HelloFresh, Blue Apron or Plated. Both companies choose how many and what kind of meals they’d like to order each week, which are then shipped to the buyer’s address.

But instead of a cardboard box of raw ingredient­s with a recipe card, Yumble sends a box filled with TV dinner- like containers, sticker sheets and activity books for children. The prepared meals have kid- friendly portions sizes and such foods as turkey cheddar pinwheels and “chicken pops” made of ground chicken rolled in panko crumbs.

The subscripti­on cost between $ 48 and $ 168 each week, depending on the number of meals.

Since launching in July 2017, Yumble has served more than 1 million meals, and has plans and launch a line of cold pasta salad meals as the school year approaches, Parker said.

Nature Life, a company that launched in 2016, has a similar model but offers more daring foods, including cheesy zucchini pomodoro and Thai coconut chicken. It also offers products for babies, toddlers and children up to 18 years old, changing food types and increasing portion sizes as children get older. The plans range from about $ 52 to $ 119 per week.

“We try to really provide a fresh, nutritiona­lly- balanced and wholesome meal for families,” Jennifer Chow, cofounder of Nurture Life said. “But we also try to help children develop a great love of food and expand their palates.”

Prepackage­d trade- off

A balance of different food groups is important for a child’s dietary needs, but prepackage­d meals come at the cost of high sodium levels, according to Julie Stefanski, a nutritioni­st with the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

Children’s sodium needs are much lower than adults, and Stefanski said that parents should ensure that the rest of the day’s snacks and meals are low sodium options if they use these meals.

“The size and appetite of children vary significantly,” Stefanski said in an email. Parents “should be careful about making a child eat an entire meal or denying more food if the child has already finished their meal option.”

As the portion sizes are determined by company standards rather than parents and children, the meals might not be the right size for every kid, Stefanski said.

Georgia’s Multon has found this true, as she’ll often add a side of fruit or something extra for her 8- year- old daughter. She said they’re the perfect size for her youngest on the nights when there isn’t time to cook.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States