Sunday, January 5, 2014

Turn MyPlate into YourPlate

First Lady Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move! initiative has emerged as a powerful force in operation childhood obesity prevention. The campaign focuses on encouraging kids to increase current levels of physical activity (an hour a day keeps the doctor away!) while practicing healthier eating habits. Current USDA dietary recommendations are represented by a simple picture: MyPlate, an accessible and appealing visual meal-planning guide. 
Unlike the old food pyramids of yesteryear, with their bread-and-pasta bases and ambiguous “servings”, MyPlate is simpler for parents and children alike. Before we dig in, we should be asking: “Do fruits and veggies make up half of this meal? Do the other two quarters consist of lean protein and whole grains?” And instead of a soda or other sugar-sweetened drink, how about a glass of low fat milk? (PS: MyWish? Can we have a glass of plain water on the other side of the plate, please?) 

Because MyPlate doesn’t suggest specific foods, but instead recommends healthy combinations of the different food groups, we can once again get creative with our cooking. As the father of lateral thinking, Edward de Bono once said, “Creativity involves breaking out of established patterns in order to look at things in a different way.” So parents and healthy eaters, break out of that macaroni and cheese matrix! Crack open some cookbooks (for ideas, not recipes) and then start experimenting… The more new things you try, the better you’ll get at improvising (and combining) a range of balanced dishes.

The best part of having an open-ended, simple guide as a template is that parents can get creative about planning meals with their children. We’re all busy, but even if we can include them a couple of times a week, getting kids more engaged in choosing the foods that they eat is a really good idea. Studies suggest that exposing kids to a range of foods (via cooking, gardening, eating, etc.) will help them develop healthier eating habits later on. So, don’t let the picky-eater blues get you down! Your efforts today will likely mean that tomorrow, your little ones will be begging for more sautéed broccolini.  Here are just a few simple, fun suggestions to turn MyPlate into YourPlate:

• If you can, take your children with you when you shop for fruits and vegetables. It doesn’t matter if it’s a supermarket or a Farmer’s Market! Wherever you go, hang out around the vegetables and let your kids choose something to try cooking that night. They choose what’s on the plant-based half of the plate and you choose a lean protein and whole grain to complement their selection. (In the past, I’ve had to look up how to cook a “sunchoke” or what to do with parsnips to make them…edible, but we all ended up learning something in the end!)
• Give MyPlate an international twist. Make one meal every month a MyVacationPlate meal. Choose a country and cuisine and try and structure that night’s dinner around the country. Even better, let your children pick the country and get them involved in researching what other people in the world eat! (Learning the names of international specialties are a great way to expose them to the sounds of different languages too.)
• Get your children into the kitchen and cooking with you! Give them an age-appropriate task and let them contribute to the meal. Even the smallest kids can skewer fruit, mash avocados or chop mushrooms with plastic knives. Let older kids prepare a simple fruit salad, wash and prep greens, peel and cut apples for a healthy crumble, etc.  The possibilities are endless. Not only will you get to enjoy having your child’s company in the kitchen, but your child will also get a boost of self-esteem knowing that they prepared a little something that’s on everyone’s plate!

By: Maya Adam and Jackie Low

18 comments:

  1. Reading this today just gives me the encouragement to continue to do what i have started with my 11 month old son. Am grateful for this new idea into my life.

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  3. Happy to receive this course today, i don't have baby now, but it looks good to learn something new and correct rencently. I also wish to learn for helping the people around me to build a woderful foods world for all of kids.

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  4. Thank you for your post! :-D I'm agree with you, but...what about the glass of milk? Many authors are agree with the fact that milk is not so good as we think. Hormones and other stuff are accused of being the cause of many problems, instead to give us some benefits.
    But if we want to drink milk...why low fat? It is recognized that milk fat contains enzymes useful for its digestion. Also, it contains important fat-soluble vitamins, that would be lost in the use of a semi-skimmed milk.
    So I think that it's better reduce fat in other way, such for example cooking without fat, or using a little bit of raw extra virgin olive oil.

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    1. i totally agree with that. it should actually be a glass of water. The milk lobby is very powerful i guess. In any case, if it has to be milk, then better as natural as possible, the least processed: full fat, dairy milk, no UHT etc.. Apart from the hormones, the antibiotics they put on those poor cows, the feeds (corn instead of grass which they were not designed to digest) is also that our stomachs once we stopped breastfeeding can not digest the lactose. Don't get me wrong i am no anti-milk fundamentalist,i love to make a bechamel (white sauce), but from there to claim is healthy...let's say it is tasty.

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    2. Good thought! I had never thout that much into it. Do you consume much dairy, or no?

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  5. Good read. Am ready for me. With a 8 and a 5 year old ready to take off on this.

    As queried by Rachele, milk is one contentious issue that I would love some clarity on.

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  6. I didn't grow up in the U.S., so to me, a glass of milk with a meal seems a bit off-putting. I would imagine having such a heavy drink would kill your apetite for other foods. I think I'll keep serving milk for breakfast and before bed!

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  7. I received your kind invitation to participate in this course. I am an overweight person, my wife too and I think this course will be very useful to nourish better although're not kids. We already have 50 years. I am very happy to participate in your course just hope to start date. Greetings. with affection. Bill

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    1. That's awesome that you want to get healthy! Have you started the course?

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  8. Hi joined the course.....have a 5 yr old son who loves cooking but is a picky eater..have tried involving him to roll his own chapati so he loves eating what he has cooked himself....want some alternative for biscuits as he loves oreos n somtimes eats less meal to eat the biscuits.... excuse given ...mom food was spicy...

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  9. I so love the MyVacationPlate meal suggestion! Will try this myself. Thanks Maya!

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  10. Hi, I have read that milk with a meal doesn't allow our body to absorb nutrients and vitamins as it should, is that true? .


    I also have a really picky eater at home. She is 8 and wont eat even if she planted the plant and cooked it with me. She just eats quezadillas, maybe some stake, but she loves lettuce with nothing on it. Also fruits but nit that many vegetables.

    This videos have given me more ideas thank you.

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  11. Thanks, Maya. Very inspirational. My almost 7 year old son Ido is a very picky eater, won't eat fruit and vegetables. You've given me a lot of thoughts on how to persuade him to start eating more healthy food. Greetings from Israel, shabbat shalom!

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  12. Many thanks for the post. I am a mother of 3 and I am looking forward to involving my children more in the kitchen and to learning tips and ideas to improve eating routines and family meals, packed lunches, picnic treats, etc. Looking forward to watching more videos. C

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  13. I also like to prevent my child from obesity disorder. Dear you have shared an amazing article with us. Now I have started cooking healthy cuisine daily with following online cooking videos. It became really easy for me to cook a unique and tasty dish every day.

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