âA treat for myself⌠you donât have to earn it.âđś That lyric stopped me in my tracks.
Because when it comes to kids and food, Iâm a tiny bit rebellious too.
Iâm rebelling against the idea that dessert has to be earned.
When dessert is always the reward at the end of the meal, it becomes the most powerful food on the plate. Kids focus on getting to it, negotiating for it, or refusing dinner so they can hold out for sweets later.
Instead, sometimes I normalize dessert right alongside the meal.đŞ
Not every day.
đĽŚJust like I donât serve broccoli every day. But occasionally placing a small sweet on the plate helps take dessert off the pedestal and teaches kids that all foods can fit.
A few examples from this video:
⢠2 mini shortbread cookies (about 1 gram sugar total)
⢠2 low-sugar animal cookies (less than 1 gram sugar each) @lovechildorganics are a fave!
⢠1 miniature peanut butter cup (about 5 grams sugar)
âď¸Small portions.
âď¸No drama.
â¤ď¸Just food.
When sweets lose their âspecial status,â many kids become less obsessed with them and more willing to eat the rest of the meal too.
Thatâs not rebellion.
Thatâs feeding kids with balance.
⨠Thank you for following me for weekly feeding guidance grounded in 25+ years helping parents and therapists help kids find joy in food.
đĽ°Melanie
Melanie Potock / picky eater help, normalize dessert, feeding therapy tips, responsive feeding, toddler mealtime strategies, healthy relationship with food, pediatric feeding therapist, raising adventurous eaters