201 Organic Baby and Toddler Meals: The Healthiest Toddler and Baby Food Recipes You Can Make!
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About this ebook
Of course your child's food should always be made of the freshest, healthiest ingredients possible! With 201 Organic Baby and Toddler Meals, you can be sure your growing child eats the most nourishing meals nature can offer. With the wholesome recipes in this book, you can create well-balanced, all-natural dishes right in your own home. As simple to prepare as they are nutritious, these yummy baby and toddler meals include:
-Dutch Baked Apple Pancake
-Creamy Spinach Pita Pizza
-Orange Chicken Stir-Fry
-Cinnamon Pineapple Crumble
Every recipe is built to make your life less complicated—whether you're freezing them for later or making a family-friendly dish that will satisfy the whole table. These delicious meals are easy on your child's tummy, the environment, and your schedule!
Tamika L Gardner
Tamika L. Gardner began crafting homemade baby food as a new mother of two seeking to provide fresh meals beyond what any jar on the shelf could offer. As a thrifty mom who exclusively breastfed both children, purchasing pre-packaged food seemed to go against the grain of natural feeding. Therefore, she relied on advice from pediatricians and old-school mamas to make baby purees from whole ingredients. Her organic recipes have been featured on ABC News, iVillage.com, MetroParent, News and Observer, BlogHer.com, The Stir, and Dot Coms for Moms. Her mission is to encourage parents to nurture healthy children through fresh, whole foods from farm to table.
Read more from Tamika L Gardner
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201 Organic Baby and Toddler Meals - Tamika L Gardner
PREFACE
ORGANIC AWARENESS
It’s amazing how children can change your life. Even though I considered myself a fairly healthy person, I was not an ingredient scrutinizer like I am now. I realized that the food I thought was healthy was actually laden with flavor-enhancing chemicals, pesticides, and consisted of a laundry list of ingredients I couldn’t pronounce.
You can see the effects of unhealthy eating all around you on a daily basis. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), approximately 12.5 million children and adolescents are obese. It’s no wonder, when processed food has been the primary source of consumption for decades.
When I found out I was going to be a new mother, I immediately headed online to research foods that I should eat to provide optimum nutrition for my unborn child. I learned how to read the ingredients on packaging and figured out which ingredients to steer clear from. Eventually, more and more items I used to buy disappeared from my kitchen. My husband would ask me, Honey, didn’t you go grocery shopping today? Where is all the food?
I told him how the snacks and prepared foods he loved had so many unhealthy ingredients I couldn’t bring myself to use those items in our home anymore. He totally supported my new approach, and the mental shift we made changed us for the better—forever. Surprisingly for me, I realized I had a lot more money to spend on healthier items because I wasn’t purchasing the more expensive prepackaged, processed items. It was time to learn how to make real food for my family—from scratch, with real ingredients—and it started with making homemade baby food.
After our daughter was born in 2006, I wanted her to have the best nutrition that money could not buy. So, I produced my own milk via breastfeeding and made her baby food with some of the ingredients I grew in my own small garden. After our son came along 18 months later, I became a pro at making baby food and I had three organic vegetable beds right outside my doorstep. I didn’t know a whole lot about the adverse affects of pesticide use at that time, but my natural instincts would not allow me to buy chemicals to spray my plants that I would later harvest and give to my babies. Back online I went, researching natural ways to deter insects from eating at my collards and tomatoes without using chemical products.
I found that making homemade meals wasn’t as expensive or difficult as I feared. By planning ahead, using local ingredients, and finding uses for leftovers, I was able to make most of our family’s meals (my husband also chipped in). You can do it, too!
As my infants became toddlers, I was faced with a new challenge of offering them new, interesting dishes and coming up with organic meals and substitutes for items that I could not find in organic (or that were too expensive). Toddlers can eat more of a variety of foods than infants—but they can also be pickier eaters. In this book, you’ll find delicious, healthy recipes that you can make using whole ingredients, including organic, homemade versions of popular store-bought items such as salad dressing, toaster pastries, bread crumbs, and sauces. Your toddler will love eating the meals, and you’ll love serving them.
I won’t have you spending time making funny faces and dinosaur shapes with food. However, I will show you how to make good meals with ingredients you can actually find, and feel good about feeding to your family.
Cheers to raising a healthy eater!
INTRODUCTION
EMBRACE HOME-COOKED FOOD
The time has come for parents to get back in the kitchen and start cooking for their families again. Now that your infant has graduated from my first book, 201 Organic Baby Purées, here are 201 more organic meals that you can make for your child from 9 months to 3 years old. Being an active chef in your household means that you get to make healthy decisions and use the ingredients you feel are the most nutritious for your children. Gone are the days when you could blindly buy processed or chemical-rich foods. Now we know the benefits of whole foods to give your children the nourishment they need for healthy brain development and strong immune systems.
Today, organics are everywhere, and there are more organic farmers than ever before. You don’t have to drive 30 miles one way to reach the only health food store in town anymore. Now you can walk to your favorite farm stand on the corner, or take a short drive to a farmers’ market or national grocery chain, where you’ll find a variety of organic foods.
Stocking your kitchen with organic fruit, vegetables, and lean meat means your family has a lower risk of exposure to pesticides and other harmful chemicals that are found in conventional and processed foods. When you stock your kitchen with natural, whole ingredients, you can create an endless number of delicious, healthy recipes. The recipes in this book include a larger assortment of fruit and vegetable recipes to encourage children, at a young age, to eat more produce.
When you embrace cooking family meals, you will see it is not as hard as you thought and you might even get your creative juices flowing and come up with healthy family recipes that can be passed down for generations. As you create the recipes in this book, you will connect more with food. Even though it’s easy enough to spend a few dollars on a bottle of honey mustard dressing and call it a day, you will gain new insights from making your own honey mustard dressing and you will start to look at all packaged foods differently. These recipes are all easy to make, and will appeal to everyone in your family—toddler or not. Even though toddlers can be picky, their palates are also a blank slate. Offer them a variety of textures, flavors, and consistencies, and see which they prefer. In this book, you’ll find simple but sophisticated dishes, from Chilled White Grape Peach Soup (Chapter 4) to Fruit-Infused Milk (Chapter 5) to Magic Mango Coleslaw (Chapter 6) to Cilantro Lime Jasmine Rice (Chapter 6). The toughest part will be deciding which recipe to try first!
QUICK REFERENCE GUIDE FOR RECIPES
Making meals from scratch can seem like a daunting task, especially if you feel like there is not enough time in the day to accomplish everything. Just like with baby purées, many of the meals in this book can be made in larger quantities, frozen, or made in advance on days when you have more time to spare than others. The following icons will help you quickly identify recipes that might appeal to you and your family:
Freezer-Friendly—These recipes can be safely frozen for up to 2 weeks for the best quality.
On-the-Go—These recipes are great to pack and take on the go.
Gluten-Free—These recipes do not contain gluten. Children with gluten intolerance or gluten sensitivity are not able to eat foods that contain gluten, including some types of pastas, bread, and any form of wheat, rye, oats (unless labeled gluten-free
), and barley. Although lots of foods contain these ingredients, you can now find many gluten-free organic products on the market. Also, lean meat, fruit, veggies, legumes, and many dairy products are naturally gluten-free. Consult with your healthcare provider to determine your child’s specific dietary needs.
Toxic Twenty—This icon is listed next to recipe ingredients that are high in pesticides and should be purchased organic if possible.
PART 1
READY, SET, PREP
When thinking about organic meals, begin with your goal in mind: Ultimately, you want to raise a child who prefers a beautiful green leafy salad with a bowl of fresh fruit and yogurt rather than one who only prefers cupcakes and potato chips. And, you want to ensure that your child is getting a good amount of antioxidants (to help fight illness and disease), nutrients, and fats needed to support healthy development and growth. In this section, you will learn about organic food production, why choosing organic foods is important, and how to stock your kitchen so that you can make the recipes in this book and get creative in the kitchen with your little one.
CHAPTER 1
ORGANICS BOOT CAMP
WHY ORGANIC FOODS ARE HEALTHIER FOR YOUR CHILD
WHAT MAKES FOOD ORGANIC?
Organic food is produced by farmers who rely on naturally occurring living organisms and other environmental factors to reduce the risks of pests and diseases in plants and animals. These natural methods encourage a healthier environment for all living things.
Organic foods are free from harmful pesticides, sewage sludge, hormones, genetic modification, artificial fertilizers, and antibiotics. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) oversees the National Organic Program, which certifies organic producers to ensure that agriculture is produced using renewable resources and methods that sustain soil and water and protect the environment. Organic growers are inspected yearly to assure compliance with these regulations.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF ORGANIC FARMING
Farming methods had been organic up until the World War II era, when chemicals were introduced to eliminate insects that sometimes ravaged food supplies. A Swiss chemist named Paul Müller discovered the insecticidal action of a chemical compound known as DDT, which was used by the U.S. military during the war to fight off disease-carrying insects. After the war, farmers adopted the use of DDT on commercial farms, not yet knowing its hazardous effects to humans and the environment.
In 1972, the United States banned the agricultural use of DDT, after research showed its ill effects on humans and the environment. Farmers then turned to other types of chemicals to reduce insect infestations. In the last decade organic farming has become widespread and the preferred choice of many parents.
HOW TO TELL IF IT’S REALLY ORGANIC
If a product is really organic, you will see a seal that says USDA Organic
imprinted on the product packaging, or as a sticker applied to items like fresh produce. The seal indicates that the product is certified and has at least 95 percent organic content. When you see the seal, it’s the real deal.
Many products on the market today proclaim themselves all-natural
or free-range,
but those terms do not mean the food was produced using organic methods. Unless you see the certified organic seal from the USDA, the product is not organic.
Here are some of the common claims you may see on labels or product packaging, and what they really mean. The USDA verifies the following claims are accurate and truthful:
Natural—This claim is regulated by the USDA only when applied to meat and poultry. Meat, poultry, and eggs must be minimally processed and contain no artificial ingredients, including flavors, colors, or preservatives, in order to use this claim. Natural
claims on food products other than meat, poultry, or eggs are not regulated by the USDA. You’ll see this word used all the time on foods that are not organic—and not even good for you—such as potato chips and cookies.
Free-Range—This claim is regulated by the USDA and only applies to poultry. Free-range
means that the flock is given unrestricted space and can wander freely indoors and outdoors with unlimited access to food and water.
Cage-Free—Regulated by the USDA, this claim applies to laying hens and means that they are able to wander freely, but within an enclosed area, with unlimited access to fresh food and water. The hens may or may not have access to the outdoors.
No Hormones Added or Raised Without Hormones—All food companies are able to make this claim because federal regulations have never permitted hormones or steroids in poultry, pork, or goat.
Grass-Fed—This claim is regulated by the USDA and means that the animals feed on grass throughout their life. However, current regulations don’t limit the use of antibiotics, hormones, or pesticides that the animals are exposed to.
Vegetarian-Fed—This claim isn’t regulated by the USDA. It implies that animals are fed a healthier diet, without animal byproducts or dairy products.
ORGANIC FOODS ARE HEALTHIER FOR CHILDREN
There has been much debate over whether or not organic produce is superior to conventionally grown foods in terms of nutrition and health benefits for both adults and children. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), both organic and conventionally grown foods have the same nutrient content that are vital to a child’s health. Some studies show that organic foods have higher nutritional content in terms of vitamins and minerals, but not enough to make an impact on overall health. However, when it comes to health advantages, the AAP clearly states, Organic diets have been convincingly demonstrated to expose consumers to fewer pesticides associated with human disease.
Pesticide exposure in infants and children can pose serious health risks. According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), children are not only exposed to pesticides