Food Revolution Phase 3: Family Style Meals

mealtime peace

Dating back to our newlywed days, George and I have eaten dinner together at the table with no interruptions.  Family meals were equally important with the addition of children. When the quads were babies, George constructed a quad feeding table, which worked well for spoon feeding them.   When they were about two years old, we transitioned to a family dinner table, which helped us better enjoy family meals because we were facing each other.  For a while, mealtime was a pleasurable experience, but then it became dreadful.

Eliminating snacks certainly didn’t improve mealtime, and changing our snack menu improved nutrition, but still did not alleviate mealtime stress.  Once again, I was back to the drawing board.  I thought back to a conversation I had with one of our ECI therapists about a year ago.  She too experienced mealtime woes and found the work of Ellyn Satter quite helpful.  The foundation of Ellyn Satter’s work hinges on this principle:

“The parent is responsible for what, when, where. The child is responsible for how much and whether.” – Ellyn Satter Institute (ESI)

I thought we’d done a decent job following this principle as well as many of the other recommendations of the ESI.

  • Served three meals a day at regular times with snacks in between
  • Sat at the table to eat
  • We ate as a family with no interruptions
  • We did not operate as short order cooks and did not limit our menu to appease anyone
  • We always served something the kids would like at meals, and included a satisfying starch
  • We let the kids choose which items from the meal to eat and how much of each item
  • We denied snacks between the regular meal and snack times

Despite all of these long standing mealtime habits, there were disgruntled children at our dinner table and it was unpleasant. Having quadruplets means that many of our daily tasks are completed in an assembly line manner, which makes things efficient and fair.   The kid’s plates were no exception.  In the past, after a meal was prepared, we set out the kids plates, filling them with each part of our meal.  We ended up with four identical plates that were doled out at the table.  During the meal, they were allowed to opt out of eating anything on their plate and were encouraged to put unwanted items to the side.  They could also request more of anything they especially liked.  Yet, there were many nights that kids screeched about something at dinner.   I had one final idea I wanted to attempt.

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While I was cooking dinner, I started asking the kids to set the table, giving each child something to set out.  They took this new responsibility very seriously, and it really helped me because it completed a task and kept them occupied while I was busy. Once the meal was ready, we placed all of the food on the center of  the table.  Then, we’d take each dish, going around the table to ask each child if they wanted any.  If it was an item they could self serve, we let them.  If it was too difficult for them to manage, we’d ask them where (the where is critical) on their plate we should put the food, and how much.  This small change was magical.  Three year olds crave independence and control over anything they can manage.  Giving them the control over what went on their plate and where it went alleviated our mealtime stress.

We’ve been serving all meals in this manner for about a month.  In that time period, not one child has thrown a fit.  In fact, the kids have been extremely complimentary about their meals saying things such as, “I like this meal, Mama!”  (Mind you, they are complimenting the very meals that previously sent them into a tailspin.) They’ve also tried foods they previously denied.  They don’t clean their plate, and I don’t want them to.  Instead, they are eating until they feel satisfied and most of all, they are happy.  Mealtime peace has been restored!

 

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Rylin didn’t want to oblige me for a photo, but her plate is a really good example of how it was designed by her.  She really loves tomatoes and she chose a tomato salad with Japanese dressing on it.  The other three aren’t as keen on tomatoes and opted out.

 

How is dinner served at your house?

 

hugs!

 

Amber

Food Revolution Phase 1: Snack Detox

banned snacks

I was ecstatic when the quads were able to start eating purees.  I genuinely enjoyed preparing homemade baby food and introducing new foods to their palates.  They had favorites, but typically tried whatever landed in their mouth.  Beginning table foods was another exciting adventure for us.  The quads loved practicing their pincer grasp to stuff morsels of food into their mouths.  As babies, they were relatively good eaters.

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When making baby food, I froze purees into silicone ice cube trays.  Then, I thawed combinations of purees to create meals.  This one was a favorite: mango and avocado.

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Then toddlerhood began.  Toddlers are notorious for being picky eaters and my foursome was no exception.  Just before age two, they became VERY opinionated about what they would or would not sample.  We decided early on we weren’t catering to anyone’s whims and we continued to present a variety of food at each meal.  We never forced them to eat certain things, but encouraged them to taste since children often need at least a dozen opportunities to sample something before deciding they like it.  As our finicky toddlers transformed to preschoolers things went from bad to worse.

 

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As preschoolers, the kids began articulating their strong opinions about food and how it was served.  If we so much as cut their sandwich in a triangle instead of a rectangle, someone would burst into tears.  If a preferred food didn’t materialize when requested, tears.  Dinner became frustrating.  After working hard to prepare fresh meals I’d hear protests at the table, tears streamed, and some kids ate nothing from their plates.  On occasion, dinner tantrums were severe enough that kids needed breaks away from the table to compose themselves.  By bedtime, whining of hunger would begin since no one ate a decent dinner.

After months of this, I decided it was time for a food revolution.  I assessed our eating habits and noticed that afternoon snacks seemed problematic.  I’m not against snacking, and know that a grazing pattern is good for one’s metabolism (I’m typically a grazer), but snacks were seriously interfering with dinner.  I was allowing the kids to fill themselves on salty carbohydrates (e.g. goldfish, veggie straws, pretzels) and by dinner they weren’t hungry.   Initially, I tried using small Gladware containers to monitor portions, but things didn’t improve.  It seemed that if these kids consumed a single goldfish it would expand and fill their stomach before dinner.

For a few weeks, I put the kibosh on all afternoon snacks.  It was a difficult transition.  The kids whined after nap as I prepared dinner, but I stuck with it.  ABSOLUTELY NO SNACKS!!!  To accommodate the change, I started serving dinner about half an hour earlier than normal.  The kids were hungrier no doubt, and they ate a little more at dinner.  Our problems were only partially solved, however.  There was still plenty of moaning and lots of tears about dinner.  Our frustration continued, and dinner was a stressful time.  Eliminating snacks was clearly not the solution to making dinner more pleasant.

Stay tuned to find out what we did next, and what we did to finally improve dinnertime.

Do you have afternoon snacks at your house?  Is dinner time stressful for your family?

 

Hugs,

 

Amber


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