Here are some clever ways you can sneak in some veggies so they get their much-needed vitamins and minerals.
Getting your kids to eat their veggies can be exhausting. But while It may be tough now, your child will become less fussy and more adventurous about food as their taste develops.
Tips to get your kids to eat more vegetables:
- Introduce it early on. Getting them to try vegetables early on will help to get them used to the taste.
- Purée or grate it into meals. This works well in pasta sauces and soups.
- Match colours. Keep your dishes as close a colour to the actual vegetable used. The closer you can keep the dish to the real deal, the better!
Grate veggies into baked goods
Carrots can be grated into almost any recipe but they are especially tasty in muffins. Another vegetable that works well in sweet dishes is baby marrow – perfect for chocolate brownies.
Use lentils in place of beef in recipes
With the correct seasoning and spicing, you can perfectly disguise lentils as beef in mince-based dishes like spaghetti bolognese and cottage pie.
Cut veggies into fun shapes
Make eating veggies fun by using a crinkle-cut knife when slicing it into rounds or use small cookie cutters to cut softer fruits and veggies, such as cucumber and watermelon, into cool shapes. You could also use a spiraliser to make ‘noodles’ out of baby marrows.
Serve crudites with a yummy dip or sauce
Plain, raw vegetables are way more enjoyable when dipped in a flavourful spread like hummus or tzatziki.
Get creative with celery
Celery sticks are the perfect vessels for dipping into hummus or peanut butter.
Make healthier flapjacks using steamed pumpkin
Get the same taste of warm, comforting pumpkin pie by adding cooled, steamed pumpkin to your flapjack batter and blitzing it together.
Swap out sugary pancake fillings like syrup and caramel for fruit
Fruit in its whole, raw state is packed with loads of fibre – serve pancakes with cut fruit and a smidgeon of honey the next time you whip up a batch of pancakes.
Make vegetable fritters
Veggie fritters are a great way to use up the forgotten vegetables lurking in your fridge’s crisper drawer. Vegetables that work well in fritter batter include baby marrows, leeks, spring onions, carrot, corn, cabbage and peas.
Turn baby marrows and brinjals into crunchy fries
These veggie fries offer a flavour and texture explosion your kids will love. Dunk slices of baby marrow or brinjal into egg white, then dredge them in a mixture of panko breadcrumbs, flour, and seasoning. Bake until crisp and golden.
Make healthier homemade crisps
Swap out store-bought crisps for a deliciously crunchy sweet potato version. Bonus? You can make them in an air fryer. Slice thin rounds of sweet potato, baste with olive oil and air fry at 200’C for 6 minutes, before turning over and baking for a further 7–8 minutes.
Bulk up fish cakes with tinned beans
Traditionally, mashed potato is used as a binding agent for fish cakes, but you can get the same effect using tinned white beans, such as cannellini or butter beans.
Swap out flour tortillas for lettuce wraps
Inject some more nutrition to hearty dishes where you’d usually pair it with a bread or wrap (think lapping up mince curry) by using lettuce leaves instead of carb-heavy white-flour wraps.
Swap out pizza dough for a cauliflower crust
Blitz cauliflower. Steam and squeeze out the excess liquid before combining with grated hard cheese and mozzarella, and two eggs. Your kids won’t know the difference!
Take boring veg to the next level in an egg-based dish
Frittatas and Spanish omelettes are great for hiding veggies such as broccoli, sweet potato, and bell peppers.