Key points
- Good nutrition is important for young children to help them grow healthy and strong.
- Try these tips to help children enjoy new food.
Why it matters
Good nutrition is important for young children to help them grow healthy and strong. Children need a variety of nutritious foods each day for healthy growth and brain development. Early eating experiences can also affect how people eat as they get older. This is why it is important to introduce young children to healthy foods, including a variety of fruits and vegetables.
Follow these tips to help your picky eater try new foods.
Try different approaches
- Try eating the food first to show them you like it. Then, let them try it.
- Make funny faces with the foods on their plate. It may help them get excited to eat it.
- Give them a choice of different foods to try. Let them decide which one to try today.
- Serve new foods with foods you know they like.
- Try freezing small bites of leftover foods. You can use these later and avoid throwing food away.
- Wait a couple of days before offering the food again. It can take more than 10 times before your child likes it.
As children get older, they may start refusing foods they used to like or start showing signs of being a picky eater. Favoring just a couple of foods or not wanting foods to touch each other on the plate are normal behaviors. These behaviors often go away by the time the child is about 5 years old.
Children may need to try some foods many times.
Try a variety of tastes and textures
Giving your child foods with a variety of different tastes and textures can help them learn to accept and like a variety of foods. You can let your child try a variety of textures including:
- Smooth (strained or pureed).
- Mashed or lumpy.
- Finely chopped or ground.
Start with smooth or mashed foods first and then move towards finely chopped or ground foods as they get older. This can help your child develop chewing skills, as well as fine motor skills like pinching and picking up food with their fingers. Be sure to offer foods in the right size, consistency, and shape for your child's age and development to help prevent choking.
Keep it fun!
Try these playful activities to keep your picky eater engaged and open to new tastes and textures.
Even the youngest can help by washing and sorting foods. Encourage your child to use 3 of their 5 senses (smell, touch, taste) as you prepare food. Prepare the same fruit or vegetable in different ways.
Developed with the CDC Foundation.
Resources
- CDC's Infant and Toddler Nutrition page.
- Signs Your Child is Hungry or Full
- Good Nutrition Starts Early
- MyPlate resources for infants and toddlers.
- American Academy of Pediatrics's video: Tips for Feeding Picky Eaters