Anna Faris, Bethenny Frankel & More Share Their Kid Food Hacks

As any parent, grandparent, babysitter, teacher, older sibling, or essentially anyone who has ever tried to feed a small child can attest: Kids like what they like. And a lot of times, what they don’t like is what’s actually healthiest for them: be it broccoli or beets or butter beans (that’s Lima beans to us Northerners). But luckily, there are plenty of clever food hacks to get kids to eat healthy — even if some of them involve, you know, tricking your kids a little (what? They’ll thank you when they’re older).

We caught up with some famous foodie moms — from chefs to actors — to ask them for their #1 food hack for battling the dreaded child beast: the picky eater. As these moms show, it is possible to change your kids’ eating habits for the better — and it’s far easier than you might think. Check out their tips from our exclusive interviews, below.

Gail Simmons

Top Chef veteran, cookbook author, Iron Chef Canada host, SHE Media #BlogHer19 Food speaker, and (don’t forget!) mom of two Gail Simmons sure knows a thing or two about kids in the kitchen. “My son is only 11 months so you don’t even have to trick him yet, because he has no idea what he’s eating,” Simmons tells SheKnows. Her daughter, on the other hand, “is far more opinionated now than she used to be.”

The one thing kiddo will always agree to eat? Healthy soups. “Soup is our ‘hack’ for her,” Simmons explains. “You can toss whatever vegetables you have in a pot and cook them down with lentils and chickpeas and Moroccan spices and herbs, and she will eat it by the bowl and never question what’s in it.” Healthy, kid-friendly, and great for leftovers? What a win.

Anna Faris

Actor and co-parenting queen Anna Faris‘ trick to getting her 6-year-old son Jack Pratt to eat healthy? Putting him to work. Faris tells SheKnows that her mom — Jack’s grandma — “started cooking with Jack when he was 2-1/2, and he was just cracking eggs and mixing things… I love to cook, so for me that’s always been such a bonding time for us.”

What’s Jack’s favorite healthy meal to whip up himself? “He loves making chili,” Faris says. And as for Faris’ mom, the one who started it all: She “just got [Jack] chef’s knives and an apron and a cookbook,” Faris laughs.

Lauren Bush Lauren

Another #BlogHer19 Food speaker, Lauren Bush Lauren — who is also a humanitarian, designer, model, mom, and, you know, granddaughter of George H.W. Bush — is not above using actual deception to get her kid to eat healthy (and we don’t blame her, either). “One trick to get my son to eat healthy food is to use reverse psychology,” Bush Lauren tells SheKnows. “If he is not eating his broccoli, for example, I will say, ‘Don’t eat that, please don’t eat it’ — and he will usually participate in the game and eat it quickly and joyfully.” Checkmate, kiddo.

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Bethenny Frankel

Entrepreneur and RHONY alum — and #BlogHer19 Food speaker — Bethenny Frankel is not into the whole “hack” thing in the first place. “I don’t know if I believe in ‘hacks’ for eating healthy,” Frankel tells SheKnows. “I think that if you introduce a lot of different foods and there really isn’t a ‘kid’s menu,’ which there never has been for me…they just end up eating a lot of variety of foods. If you take them to interesting restaurants and different ethnic cuisines it gets them excited.”

What’s the weirdest healthy thing her kid is into eating? “My daughter loves seaweed,” Frankel says. “She loves olives, she likes Asian food, she likes Mexican, she likes all different multicultural food, so I think that makes people like more interesting things, makes it fun.”

Frankel’s best advice for making healthy food exciting for her kid: “Include her friends. Make a wish when you eat something new. I think it’s just not treating them like the mac-‘n’-cheese, chicken finger generation. Unless it’s truffle mac-‘n’-cheese.”

Sheinelle Jones

Jones is a journalist, news anchor, mom, and (wait for it) #BlogHer19 Food speaker who, like Lauren Bush Lauran, is a fan of the reverse psychology technique — or, as she calls it, the Jedi Mind trick of kid food. “If it’s something they haven’t tried before or if it’s a vegetable…frankly, I don’t put the pressure on them,” Jones tells SheKnows. “I put it in my bowl, and I’ll eat it; I’ll say ‘Oh, my gosh. This is so good. It’s probably too spicy for you.’ And they’ll say, ‘Nuh-uh, I can try it.’ Sometimes, they want to think they can handle it. Then I’ll say, ‘Well, do you want some of mine? I don’t know, I don’t really have enough.’ So I give them a little bit from my plate which is really not for me, but it’s the Jedi mind trick — it really works.”

Ali Larter

Actor Ali Larter has quite the impressive fridge — and she sure knows how to use its contents. Larter tells SheKnows that her trick to getting her kids to eat veggies is simple: pasta, butter, and cheese. “My last-minute dish for the kids is whole-grain pasta boiled with broccoli,” Larter explains. “Then I mix in olive oil, a dab of butter and Parmesan cheese. I try to get all the nutrients in one bowl.” Her #2 hack? Frozen fruits. “We freeze bananas as a quick treat and to make creamy ‘ice cream,”” Larter adds. “There are also tons of frozen mango and wild blueberries for smoothies.”

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