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The Associated Press: Eleven-year-old Olivia Gerasole (left) and her 13-year-old sister, Isabella, prepare for dinner at their home in Evanston, Ill.
Charles Rex Arbogast /

Published September 29, 2009 04:38 pm - In an era when many parents struggle just to get dinner on the table, never mind involve the kids in the prep, the Gerasole sisters are an enviable example of the difference a little stove time with the little ones can make.

AP: Tips for engaging children in the kitchen



The Associated Press

The Spatulatta sisters, better known as Isabella and Olivia Gerasole, learned to make delicate pizzelle cookies from their grandmother, Hawaiian salads from their mother and acquired a love of all foods Italian from their dad.

They also learned how to turn all that quality kitchen time into a budding culinary career, with a cookbook and a James Beard Award-winning Web site to their credit. All by the age of 13 and 11.

“Your parents are the ones who teach you to have domestic abilities,” said the eldest, Isabella, as the siblings sat in their suburban Chicago kitchen after making basil pesto and caprese salad. “It’s a fun way to spend time with family, family history and family culture.”

In an era when many parents struggle just to get dinner on the table, never mind involve the kids in the prep, the Gerasole sisters are an enviable example of the difference a little stove time with the little ones can make.

Research repeatedly has shown children eat healthier foods, are more confident and learn valuable life and academic skills when they cook with their families. So for on-the-go parents looking to get cooking with their kids, the experts offer some easy advice.

Start by embracing the fact that they are children. Mistakes will happen, says Food Network host Guy Fieri.

“You can’t do everything for a kid in cooking and expect them to get the whole experience,” he said. “Yes, there’s the potential they’re going to drop the cookie sheet, but we’ve got to let them be involved.”

Fieri, who makes pizza and popcorn with his two young sons, urges parents to be cautious with kids in the kitchen but also give them enough freedom to make the experience meaningful. This includes involving them in decisions of what to make.

Barbara Beery, a kids cooking expert and president of the Batter Up Kids cooking school in Austin, Texas, said parents need to make sure their children are given age-appropriate tasks that won’t be too hard.

“If it’s too difficult it’s going to defeat the purpose,” Beery said.

She said 2-year-olds can scrub food clean, 3-year-olds can put toppings on a pizza or decorate cookies, 4-year-olds can crack eggs over a bowl or spread peanut butter with small spatulas and 5-year-olds can measure ingredients, stir with spoons or knead dough.

Choosing recipes wisely is key, Beery said. She suggests recipes that are simple to put together, have fewer ingredients, quick preparation and fast finish time. Parents also should have something to occupy children, a coloring book or games, while they’re waiting for the dish to cook.

Tanya Wenman Steel, editor-in-chief of recipe site Epicurious.com and co-author of “Real Food for Healthy Kids,” said parents should manage their kitchen time for efficiency and organization. Plan a night for cooking with the children so you aren’t trying to jam it in on busier days. She suggests making two or three dishes together on Sunday that can be leftover lunch and dinner the rest of the week.

“A roast chicken on Sunday can be lunch Monday,” she said. “A casserole type of food or a stew always tastes better the next day. You can keep up every day by doing something for the next day.”



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