19
Oct/09
3

Superfoods: For Babies and Children

Superfoods: For Babies and Children

From Publishers Weekly

British bestseller Karmel (The Complete Baby and Toddler Meal Planner) has made a name for herself cooking meals for kids that any devoted parent could admire, packing each breakfast, lunch and dinner with healthy, nicely presented, delicious foods. Now she and nutritionist Sacher make baby and child fare even healthier by adding more of the brightly colored, antioxidant-rich, disease-fighting fruits and vegetables they call superfoods to every recipe. Broc
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Presented by Baby Food Grinder

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  1. Fantasia
    1:18 am on October 20th, 2009

    I don’t know about you, but peanut butter sandwiches meal after meal, with an occasional dose of macaroni and cheese, just doesn’t float my boat. How do the kids stand it? And is there anything that we can do to get them out of the chicken nuggets rut?

    Let me hear a chorus of a resounding “YES!”

    Enter SuperFoods for Babies and Children, a cookbook that gives more than kid-friendly recipes–it gives hope, encouragement and direction. Annabel Karmel (with a last name like Karmel you know a cookbook has to be good) breaks her book into age-appropriate food selection and introduction and the recipes to make it happen.

    By the time the children turn three, they have been introduced to a wide variety of foods that even tempt an adult pallet. As if this isn’t enough, every page has a sidebar that gives nutritional information nuggets like: “Raspberries contain ellagic acid, which can help protect us against cancer,” next to the recipe that will make our kids eat them. She also has a key that indicates whether a recipe can be frozen, or is suitable for vegetarian.

    SuperFoods for Babies and Children inspired me to try just a little harder to get my family to eat better. She gives such good, realistic information and tempting meal ideas that even this mother, who has fought the food battle for years, is ready to go the rounds again. And you know what? Yesterday’s trip to the store yielded a cartful of produce that the kiddos happily munched all afternoon. That gets my two thumbs up.

    Armchair Interviews says: An inspiring and fun cookbook for all ages.

  2. Ting
    1:44 am on October 20th, 2009

    With my first child I bought the usual baby food in jars and watched her make horrified faces when I put food into her mouth (except fruit of course) I didn’t know a book like this existed. These recipes are absolutely fabulous! My second child loves everything I give her from this book. She hasn’t refused anything yet – not even spinach with mushrooms and potato. Some of the recipes do require a bit of cooking, but usually nothing over 10-20 minutes and then I have enough for the rest of the month. She has been introduced to so many healthy nutritious foods that I couldn’t otherwise give her because they don’t come in jars. Easy, delicious – and the books has recipes for toddlers and older kids too.

  3. Vice
    3:16 am on October 20th, 2009

    Beware if you are buying this book for an infant starter to solid foods! the first chapter starts off by giving a new solid food everyday of the first week, whereas most pediatricians recommend 1 new solid every 3-5 days to ensure there is no reaction from the child. The author starts by giving rice cereal on day 1 and moving onto apples day 2 and carrots day 3. Quickly jumping to the 7-9 months section of the book, she lists some “tooth friendly snacks” for our little ones teething and with new teeth…some of her suggestions are “cream cheese with mini bread sticks, mini sandwiches with peanut butter or egg salad, vegetable sticks on their own or with dip” just to list a few. some of these items are choking hazards, let alone peanut allergy issues with some pediatricians not recommending peanut foods until children are well into their toddler years.
    the book is cute and has great recipes for older kids, as well as purees for the more experience solid food eating baby. This book is not nearly as good as some other baby “first” solids books available.

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