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MAGAZINE
CUSTOMER
SERVICE CENTER
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Cook
With Your Kids!
Getting
together with your kids in the kitchen is a great family activity!
Food
Network features a week-long series of specials on the
benefits of cooking with your children;
from pleasing picky eaters, educational baking
and avoiding obesity. Here
is one aspect of how baking can be used as a fun, educational
tool.
- Math. Whether you’re filling a pan
with half the batter, breaking three eggs into a bowl, or
measuring out 1/3 of a cup of oil, baking offers many opportunities
to teach your children about arithmetic. Be sure to ask
pointed questions to get them thinking such as: "How much
of the measuring cup is still empty?" and "If this recipe
calls for two sticks of butter and we only have half a stick
in the fridge, how many do we need to buy at the supermarket?"
What better way to introduce real-life math applications
than with double chocolate brownies?
- Culture. Baking desserts from different
parts of the world is a wonderful way to teach your children
about different cultures — including your own. Use a family
recipe for zeppole as an opportunity to talk about grandma’s
childhood in Sicily, or a flan you discovered during a childhood
trip to Argentina. You’ll see how the preparation of ethnic
recipes often leads to discussions on customs, language,
holidays, and more.
Organization.
Getting ready to prepare dessert can help little ones learn
patience and planning. Have them look over the recipe in
advance and make a list of all the ingredients that are
not in the kitchen and need to be purchased. Before launching
into preparations, get out the pots, pans, bowls, and utensils.
Once everything is set up, determine who will do which task.
- Following directions. Baking
is a process in which steps must be executed in a particular
order for a recipe to be successful. Ask your child, "Wouldn’t
it be silly if we poured all the ingredients into the cake
pan before combining them with the mixer?" or "The recipe
says to let the cake cool before icing. What do you think
might happen if we ice the cake while it’s still hot?" Your
child can also learn to follow the household rules: Wash
hands before cooking and clean up before leaving the kitchen,
for example. Remember that kids get excited easily, so you
may have to repeat directions often.
- Responsibility. Give kids
– even young ones – a role in the baking experience. Preschoolers
can wash fruits and knead dough, while older children can
break and beat eggs, measure out ingredients, and frost
cakes. Clean-up is the perfect time to teach children about
completing a project from beginning to end.
Resources:
www.foodnetwork.com
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