Cooking with Preschool-Age Children
Appropriate Cooking Tasks by Age
Tasks for two-to three year olds:
- Stir with a spoon
- Shake ingredients in a plastic container with a tight cover
- Use a butter knife to spread cream cheese, jelly or peanut butter
- Mash boiled fruits and vegetables after they have cooled
- Combine ingredients in a large bowl and mix
- Make no-cook recipes such as sandwiches and salads
- Practice using whisks, spatulas, strainers, colanders, wooden spoons, cookie cutters, and rolling pins.
Three-to-four year olds can safely do all of the above plus:
- Use plastic measuring spoons and cups marked to the proper amounts
- Cut soft fruits and boiled vegetables with plastic knives
- Combine dry and wet ingredients using forks, whisks, spoons or rotary beaters
- Pour liquids into containers with large openings such as colanders, blenders, or wide-mouth bowls
- Use non-electric food grinders, choppers, and juicers
Four-to-five year olds can safely do all of the above plus:
- Use a heat source placed on a low surface (with adult supervision
- Use a hand mixer (with adult supervision)
- Cut flat ingredients with a plastic serrated knifes (under adult supervision)
- Be taught to use vegetable peelers, cheese graters, and nut crackers
Choking Hazards
Preschool-age children do not have the chewing skills necessary to break down many foods
To reduce the possibility of a child choking:
- Sit with children while they are eating
- Insist that children remain seated while eating
- Set a calm eating atmosphere
- Prepare certain foods with care:
- Chop nuts and seeds finely
- Slice grapes lengthwise
- Shred hard raw vegetables
- Remove inner skin from oranges
- Remove pits from all fruits
- Spread peanut butter thinly
- Never give popcorn or hard candies to children under four
Taken from "Healthy Heart Snack Choices," a facts sheet from the Cornell Cooperative Extension; Cornell University, Plainview, New York