The Family Dinner Project

The “Three T’s” of Eating With Toddlers

Dinner with toddlers and young preschoolers can be a notoriously challenging experience. Over the years, we’ve tackled the subject in a number of posts, including Dr. Anne Fishel’s advice on How to Make Your Toddler an Adventurous Eater and Cooperative Diner, and this relatable pandemic-era article about managing lockdown dinners with a two-year-old. But there are lots of good reasons why parents may still shy away from trying to manage meals with toddlers at the table. The most common challenges — and the possible solutions — boil down to these “three T’s” of eating with toddlers.

Timing

Dr. Anne Fishel points out that the timing of family dinner is often all wrong, as far as toddlers are concerned. “Toddlers tend to be hungry by late afternoon, when parents are just unwinding from their workdays and may not yet be ready to eat,” she says. Of course, that’s to say nothing of the fact that in many families, parents are rushing in the door later in the evening, fresh from daycare pickup with tired and hungry little ones in tow.

Many parents choose not to eat dinner as a family when their kids are small, precisely because the timing is such a challenge. Here are some solutions that may offer a compromise:

Tastes

Although it’s common for toddlers to be selective eaters, the real “picky eating” of childhood typically happens closer to preschool and early elementary ages. Your two-year-old may go on food jags or seem to be able to exist on a steady diet of air and the occasional handful of crackers, but all in all, toddlers are usually more curious about trying new foods than kids between the ages of 4 and 8. That’s why so many parents can commiserate about an eighteen-month-old who happily ate salmon or curry, but by kindergarten would only tolerate a specific brand of mac and cheese for lunch.

To capitalize on toddlers’ receptiveness to new foods while also balancing their totally unpredictable whims, here are a few things you can try:

Temperament

Part of what makes eating with toddlers so challenging — and so different, from family to family and even child to child — is the unpredictability of a toddler’s temperament. Some kids are naturally going to be more laid-back and mellow than others; some kids will have a more adventurous palate. But almost all toddlers will have some elements of the curiosity, mobility, activity, and stubbornness that make this age group unique.

Whether you’ve got a go-with-the-flow little one, or an “I do it myself!” kind of kid, here are some things to keep in mind about managing the toddler temperament at mealtimes:

The toddler years go quickly, but when you’re in the thick of this phase, it can feel like it lasts forever. Remember that the habits you set up as a family now are the ones you’ll be able to build on as your child grows. Setting the expectation that mealtimes are for everyone to enjoy together, even if they require a little creative compromise and a lot of patience at this age, will put you on the path to many years of connecting around the dinner table — probably with a lot less throwing of food as time goes on!

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