How do I get my kids to eat snacks that are good for them?
The makers of snack foods know which people in the family to
gear their advertising toward --the children of course! As
a parent, it is getting harder to get kids interested in fresh
fruit and vegetables when their eyes are drawn to all the
colorful packaging of sugar-sweetened cereals, sodas, cookies,
and snack cakes.
Try to teach your kids that foods shouldn't be looked upon
as "good" or "bad." All foods, even sweets or higher fat
snacks can fit into a healthy diet sometimes. The most
practical approach is not to include these less healthy
snack foods on your grocery list. It is fine to go out for
an ice cream, a soda, or buy individual-sized chips or candy
when you feel it is time for a treat. This shows children
that these foods are acceptable, but not to be eaten in
unlimited amounts. The sooner this approach is taken, the
easier your job will be in getting your children to eat
healthier, even at snack time.
Healthy Snack Ideas
- Fresh fruit (apples, oranges, banana, grapes, peaches,
pears, melon). Try sliced combinations or offer yogurt
for dipping.
- Baby carrots, broccoli and cauliflower tops (low-fat
dressings for dipping)
- Low-fat or fat-free yogurt
- Vanilla wafers or graham crackers dipped in low-fat or fat
free yogurt or milk
- Applesauce
- 1/2 bagel with fat-free strawberry cream cheese
- Pretzel twists
- Flavored rice cakes
- Low-fat microwave or air-popped popcorn
- Dried fruits (apricots, raisins, cranberries)
- Trail mix made with cereal (Chex or Cheerios), pretzels,
nuts, seeds, dried fruits
- Mozzarella cheese stick (part-skim) with fruit chunks and
low-fat crackers
- Cottage cheese with pineapple chunks
- Celery with peanut butter
- Celery with low-fat cream cheese and raisins
- Cereal bar (non-frosted) with milk
- Low sugar cereal with fresh fruit
- Home baked skinless chicken breast nuggets with honey
mustard sauce
- 1/2 turkey and Swiss cheese sandwich with honey mustard and
fruit slices
- 100% juices (limit to 1 or 2 eight-ounce cups per day to
avoid juice taking the place of fresh fruits and lean
milk)
- Low-fat or nonfat chocolate milk
- Low-fat or nonfat yogurt drinks
Dessert Snack Ideas
- Fruit juice bar
- Jell-O with fruit
- Fruit Newton Cookies (2)
- Animal Crackers (15)
- Fruit smoothies made with frozen yogurt, frozen fruit,
Carnation instant breakfast
- Yogurt creamsicles (combine 1/2 cup plain yogurt and 1/2 cup
fruit juice concentrate (undiluted). Freeze in molds.
Note for parents of babies and toddlers
At 8 months old to 1 year, your child will be able eat small
portions of the some of the snacks listed above. Typically it
is recommended that cow's milk, egg whites, and citrus fruits
not be offered until after 1 year of age. You should not allow
nuts until your child is at least 2 years old. Always supervise
your baby or toddler while eating to avoid choking. "Choke
foods" include raisins, cranberries, grapes, chunks of carrot,
nuts, seeds, chunks of peanut butter, hard candies, hotdog
pieces, and popcorn. When in doubt, chop it or wait until your
child is older. The danger of choking on these types of foods
remains high until age 4.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2007 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.