Every child needs appropriate amounts of calories, proteins, minerals and vitamins to grow. The best way to ensure kids get what they need while maintaining a healthy weight is to provide a variety of nutritious food that are low in fat and sugar.
Aim for five servings of fruits and vegetables each day. You can gradually build up to this amount. A good goal to try: eat fruit with each meal for a week.
Reduce fat. Opt for low-fat substitutes:
Low fat dairy - skim or 1% milk (after age 2) , cheese with 2 to 6 grams of fat per ounce
Lean meats and poultry -95% lean ground beef or turkey ; remove visible fat from meat; remove skin from poultry
Low -fat or fat-free salad dressings, mayonnaise and margarine
Desserts -angel food cake, low-fat ice cream or frozen yogurt, animal crackers, vanilla wafers, gingersnaps graham crackers
Eat sugary foods in moderation. If your child eats a healthy diet, one sweet a day is fine.
Drink water, skim or 1% milk (after age 2) instead of high calorie, sugary drinks
Check ingredients on nutrition labels. Foods with sugar listed as one of the first three or four ingredients may be high in sugar and should be eaten in moderation
Eat healthy snacks. Keep healthy foods on - hand for snacks. Good snack ideas include:
Fresh fruit
Low fat cheese with low fat crackers
Raw vegetables with low fat dip
Cereal with low fat milk
Graham crackers with low fat hot chocolate
Applesauce
Serve appropriate portions. Oversize portion often contributes to weight gain. To get an idea of the right portions to serve your child, it might help to visualize the appropriate serving size by comparing it to objects you're familiar with:
Food
Average Serving Size
What it looks like
Meat
2-3 ounces
Deck of cards
Pasta or rice
1/2 cup
Tennis ball or ice cream scoop
Bread
1 slice
Computer disk
Peanut butter
2 tablespoons
Ping Pong ball
vegetables
1/2 cup
Light bulb
cheese
1 ounce
Four dice
Wowcthats very informative to my children