How to Make a Feeding Plan for a Toddler

Use the USDA MyPlate customized food plan, http://www.choosemyplate.gov/myplate/index.aspx ., Create a list of your toddler's favorite foods or what they prefer to eat., Prioritize the list by nutritional value., Integrate fruits or vegetables into...

10 Steps 2 min read Medium

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. Step 1: Use the USDA MyPlate customized food plan

    This will give you a list of the food pyramid groups and how much servings should be ideally given to a toddler on a daily and weekly scale. , You can break it down into meal categories, such as breakfast, lunch, dinner, snack, and dessert or food groups, such as cereal, fruits, vegetables, meats, dairy, etc., See what is healthy and unhealthy and try to substitute foods.

    Cross out any cookies and put graham or animal crackers in its place., Breakfast: blueberry pancakes or waffles, fresh sliced strawberries, small fruit salad, sliced bananas, etc.

    Lunch: grapes, Mandarin orange slices, fresh sliced carrots, etc.

    Snack: watermelon bites, grapes, etc.

    Dinner: sliced carrots, corn, broccoli, eggplant, yam, zucchini, etc. , Many toddlers aren't up to par in having a big breakfast after waking up, so it's best to keep things very light.

    Food such as yogurt, a bagel, or fresh chopped fruit are excellent choices without filling them up more than needed., Kids need energy to play and fulfill their physical needs all the time, so it's always good to have granola bars or a healthy trail mix at hand.

    It can also keep you as a parent healthy by snacking alongside with them., If they don't like it, never force it.

    Either take a break from the food and attempt later on, or find another food with similar nutrition or in the same food group.

    See if they'll try it in a different form.

    Instead of giving them sliced strawberries, see if they like a homemade strawberry smoothie., Monitor your child as you start the feeding plan.

    It'll start as a "trial and error" of nutrition, but as time goes on, the list will be more structured and stabilized with more healthier choices.
  2. Step 2: http://www.choosemyplate.gov/myplate/index.aspx .

  3. Step 3: Create a list of your toddler's favorite foods or what they prefer to eat.

  4. Step 4: Prioritize the list by nutritional value.

  5. Step 5: Integrate fruits or vegetables into every meal

  6. Step 6: on the side or in the meal itself.

  7. Step 7: Make sure that each meal has its own "weight".

  8. Step 8: Keep healthy snacks as a go-getter throughout the day.

  9. Step 9: Treat all new introduced foods as baby food rules.

  10. Step 10: Keep the food list as a guide.

Detailed Guide

This will give you a list of the food pyramid groups and how much servings should be ideally given to a toddler on a daily and weekly scale. , You can break it down into meal categories, such as breakfast, lunch, dinner, snack, and dessert or food groups, such as cereal, fruits, vegetables, meats, dairy, etc., See what is healthy and unhealthy and try to substitute foods.

Cross out any cookies and put graham or animal crackers in its place., Breakfast: blueberry pancakes or waffles, fresh sliced strawberries, small fruit salad, sliced bananas, etc.

Lunch: grapes, Mandarin orange slices, fresh sliced carrots, etc.

Snack: watermelon bites, grapes, etc.

Dinner: sliced carrots, corn, broccoli, eggplant, yam, zucchini, etc. , Many toddlers aren't up to par in having a big breakfast after waking up, so it's best to keep things very light.

Food such as yogurt, a bagel, or fresh chopped fruit are excellent choices without filling them up more than needed., Kids need energy to play and fulfill their physical needs all the time, so it's always good to have granola bars or a healthy trail mix at hand.

It can also keep you as a parent healthy by snacking alongside with them., If they don't like it, never force it.

Either take a break from the food and attempt later on, or find another food with similar nutrition or in the same food group.

See if they'll try it in a different form.

Instead of giving them sliced strawberries, see if they like a homemade strawberry smoothie., Monitor your child as you start the feeding plan.

It'll start as a "trial and error" of nutrition, but as time goes on, the list will be more structured and stabilized with more healthier choices.

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Denise Harris

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