Children’s menus aim too low, he argues — they’re a parenting crutch.
“The table is very important,” Mr. Marzovilla explained as we sat around one at his restaurant early Sunday evening with our five collective children. “It’s about nutrition, it’s about family; you go right down the line. And the children’s menu is about the opposite — it’s about making it quick, making it easy, and moving on.”We've tried to expose Slane to a variety of foods, especially fruits and vegetables. She's liking big people food and now ignores food that's been cut up. It's as if she is saying, "I'm a big girl now. I don't need your gastronomical patronizing. Cut up your own food, daddy." She is a slow warmer to new foods, but like Sam-I-Am, she tries it and likes it.
Fellow parents, how do you manage to introduce new foods to your kids?
Image from Suessville
1 comment:
We haven't gotten to the point of eating anything yet, but I'm looking forward to it!
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