Nutrition for Kids
- Does your child have multiple food allergies? And you are not sure if he gets all the nutrients he needs.
- Is your child/baby on a special diet/formula and needing guidance?
- Is your child falling behind in growth?
- Do you know how much to feed your baby or toddler?
- Are you frustrated by a picky eater at home?
- Why doesn’t your son eat vegetables? Does he have texture or sensory issues?
- Does your child use a feeding tube? Is your child having problems transitioning from tube feeding to eating food by mouth?
- Do you have one child who needs to lose weight and another who needs to gain?
Ms. Shih helps parents feel confident about feeding their kids. She takes over the tension between parents and their children at meal time.
Grace has over 25 years of experience working with the pediatric population both in and outpatient settings at LPCH (Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital) Stanford Medical Center. She has also worked at LPCH gastrointestinal (GI) clinic helping patients with failure to thrive, GI nutritional problems, feeding difficulties, and their special diets.
Many pediatric facilities consult Grace’s expertise in managing their patients/clients’ nutritional care and education. These facilities include Children’s hospital at Northern California, Palo Alto Medical Foundation, and pediatricians in private practice setting.
Below are some useful tips and tools for ensuring your child is getting proper nutrition.
1.Introducing Solid Foods
2. Getting Picky Eaters to Eat
3. Healthy Snack Ideas
4. Serving Kids fruits and vegetables.
Introducing Solid Foods
Many first-time parents wonder when to start feeding their baby solid foods and what to give them. Use these guidelines to gradually begin introducing your infant to solid foods. Teaching them to feed themselves table food is a process done with “baby steps” over the first year of a child’s life.
Age: 4-6 Months
• Semi-liquid at first; gradually add less liquid for a semi-solid
consistency
• 1 or 2 teaspoons at first; gradually increase as baby gets older
• One to two times a day
Age: 6-9 Months
• Soft foods and some finger foods that dissolve easily
• 3 to 4 tablespoons of semi-solid foods; bite-sized pieces of soft
foods
• Two to three times a day
• Mashed bananas, Applesauce, Cottage cheese, Graham
crackers, Mashed potatoes, Ground meat or poultry
Age: 9-12 Months
• Finger foods and most table foods
• Small, bite-sized portions
• Three times a day
• Examples: Apples, peeled and cut in eighths; Soft cheese, well-
cooked noodles, spaghetti with meat sauce; tender meats,
such as tuna, chicken or turkey
Getting Picky Eaters to Eat
Many parents struggle with getting their little ones to eat healthy foods. There are some tips and strategies you can use to encourage your children to eat a variety of foods and to ensure they are getting good nutrition. Remember your primary responsibility as a parent is to determine what, when, and where your child eats. Your children are responsible for how much and whether or not to eat.
As a parent you should provide the following:
An inventory of healthy foods
How Do I Get My Child to Try New Foods?
What Do I Do If My Child Won’t Eat at All?
then take the food away
adults
Remember to Involve your children in grocery shopping and meal preparation – kids are more likely to eat what they have invested their time in creating!
Healthy Snack Ideas
In today’s busy world in can be tough to find snack foods that are not only = easy to prepare, but also healthy. Too often ‘convenience foods’ are highly processed and loaded with unhealthy fats, refined sugars, or too much salt. Grabbing something healthy to eat doesn’t have to mean eating prepared foods that are packaged and sold as ‘snack foods’. Try some of the ideas below and you’ll soon find that healthy snacking doesn’t require a lot of time and effort.
Dairy
Cheese sticks
Yogurt
Frozen yogurt
Milk
Pudding made with milk
Protein
Nuts
Turkey slices
Hard-boiled egg
Edamame
Cottage cheese (try it with fruit)
Fruit
Sliced apples or oranges
Raisins
Dried cranberries
Grapes
Try slicing a banana, then freeze. Tastes like ice cream!
Vegetables
Carrot, celery and zucchini sticks with yogurt dip
Cherry tomatoes
Sliced bell pepper
Marinated artichoke hearts
Grains
Whole-grain crackers
Pretzels
Popcorn
Bowl of cereal
Rice crackers, rice cakes
Cookies made with whole grains and/or real fruit
Serving Kids Fruits and Vegetables
Here are some fun and delicious ideas for serving fruits and vegetables to your child that may encourage your picky eater to eat!
Serving Fruit to Kids
Breakfast
Salads
Snacks or Anytime
Desserts
Serving Vegetables to Kids
Breakfast
Side Dishes or Main Course
Snacks or Anytime
Add your own ideas to this list and keep it handy for some quick ideas!