Before Arely Rodriguezās twins started kindergarten, they ate everything she cooked: pozole, caldo de res, food from her native Mexico. But once they started school, all they wanted was fries, nuggets, and sandwiches.
āIt was really sad,ā says Rodriguez, who lives in Seattle. āSometimes I was really mad. I cooked this one, so you have to eat it.ā
The school lunchroom strongly influences kidsā opinions about food, whether itās from the hot lunch menu or their classmatesā lunchboxes. Rodriguezās daughter loves the Pocky that her Asian friends share, and her son loves sushi.
Hsiao-Ching Chou, a Seattle food journalist and author of three cookbooks on Chinese home cooking, packed lunches for her kids, now 15 and 17, all through school. Her go-to’s include pasta, fried rice with Chinese sausage, Japanese curry, and anything with rice and chicken. Sheād even pack an extra lunch for her daughtersā friends because everyone wanted a taste.
It used to be that anything short of peanut butter and jelly would get you lunch-shamed. Chou, who grew up in central Missouri, says Seattle is something of a bubble. That, and times have changed.
āThe global flavors are more accepted and more widely available,ā Chou says. āEverybodyās watching those competition shows, like āTop Chef,ā and they’re exposed to a wider range of food and flavors.ā
Get the kids involved
If youāre trying to expand a kidās palate, you have to make it fun. Maybe pick a different cuisine each week or month. Look at cookbooks or websites for recipes, then go shopping for ingredients together.
āInvolve them with the process of learning about and creating the food, so they have some investment in the appreciation of the final results,ā Chou says. āAnd hopefully, theyāre more likely to eat it. Hopefully, they’re proud of whatās in the lunchbox. āYeah, I helped my mom make that.āā
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Schedule too hectic to dive into recipes? Pick low-key ways to sample different cuisines, whether itās frozen dumplings from the grocery store or the puff puff (deep-fried dough) stand at the farmerās market.
Read books, watch shows about different foods
āWhatās That?ā is a picture book that tells the story of a boy who packs his favorite Taiwanese foods for his first day of school, only to feel self-conscious in a sea of deli meat and bread.
Los Angeles mom Karen Chan wrote āWhatās That?ā to encourage kids to be proud of their food, not embarrassed by it. Another message in the book is that people eat all kinds of different foods. (Just walk down the frozen aisle at Trader Joeās. . .)
Chan makes a point of reading books and watching shows about different foods and cultures with her kids, ages 5 and 2. Some of her familyās favorites: āSoul Food Sunday,ā āSunday Funday in Koreatown,ā āHow to Fold a Taco,ā and āMira Royal Detective.ā
Make lunch easy to access
Time is of the essence, so make lunch easy for kids to access on their own. Start by finding the right container; Chou likes squat thermal containers with a wide mouth.
When she sends dumplings to school, Chou tucks in a tiny squeeze bottle with just enough dipping sauce to avoid accidents. Consider something that can be finger food, like cooled-down dumplings. And donāt pick foods that will turn mushy. āMy kids love, love, love katsu, but that doesnāt hold super well for lunch,ā Chou says.
Mix it up
Sometimes Chan packs lunches, other times she signs her kids up for school lunch. With the lunches she packs, she tries to mix it up. The lunchbox might contain sushi rolls or soba noodles or a sandwich. To learn about Seattle Public Schoolās efforts to offer culturally diverse meals, check out āA Seattle Schools lunch revolutionā at Seattleschild.com.
āKids are pretty fickle ā one day they love something, and the next day they don’t,ā Chan says. āEvery now and then, I’ll get a complaint from my kid, or a lunch will come back untouched, but I try not to let that dictate what I pack too much.āĀ
Stick with it
For Rodriguez, itās important for her kids to hold onto their Mexican heritage, and that means eating Mexican food. The kids complain, but Rodriguez encourages parents not to give up.
āHome food is much better than fast food. So Iām still doing it even if the guys don’t eat it. Or a lot of it,ā Rodriguez says. āWith time, they’re going to accept it and they’re going to eat it.ā