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Rethinking the logic of kids’ menus


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By Maura Judkis, Washington Post

All that was left of Julia Washington’s seared-scallop entree were the baby artichokes. The 10-year-old speared one with a fork, eyeing it with curiosity and contempt.

“I don’t know about new things. I don’t know how they taste,” the fifth-grader from Upper Marlboro said at the restaurant Equinox. “It looks like a mushroom. I don’t like mushrooms.”

Julia is a typical child. She loves mac and cheese, fried shrimp, ice cream. But she couldn’t order from the kids’ menu that night, because Equinox has no kids’ menu. The restaurant’s chef, Todd Gray, does not believe in kid food.

“With the right encouragement, kids will eat anything,” Gray said.

Most restaurants don’t give children many choices: chicken fingers. Tater tots. Or bland, cheese-laden pizza, accompanied by a cup of limp fruit salad. And some parents are getting tired of it.

“The idea that there is different food for children drives me nuts,” said Lynn Fredericks, founder of Family Cook Productions, an organization that teaches healthful family eating. She recently launched the Kids Food Reboot, a campaign to get restaurants to adapt their kids’ menus to rely less on frozen french fries and other beige fried foods and more on healthful, fresh and — most important — interesting choices for young diners. Given the chance to eat, say, spaghetti squash or broccoli rabe, children will rise to the occasion, Fredericks says.

“Children will eat other foods. They will,” she said. “It’s just about how you present it.”

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  1. Old Long Skiis says - Posted: November 6, 2014

    Kids Menus? Well, I’m glad to see some changes!!! Vegetable and fruit gardens popping up at Sierra House Elementary, LTCC, Bijou Community Park, The Family Resource Center and many of my neighbors around So. Shore started gardens in the last few years.
    I’m heartend to hear of so many people growing their own food! Especially for the kids in school where it’s put into their lunches rather than having them eating junk food. Even my dad along with a few other residents of the senior home convinced the staff of where he’s living ,to put in a vegetable garden at the senior home, and the cooks put the fresh grown veggies into their meals!
    Anybody remember “managers choice” on the the monthly school menu? Blechh!
    Feed the kids healthy foods, teach them how to grow and keep them active outdoors, (the same can be said for us seniors!), and maybe, just maybe we’ll turn this big old boat around and motor into healthier safer waters.
    Your gardening pal,and healthy eating advocate( altho I still order a pizza from time to time), or a burger!
    Old Long Skiis