When you stick to a few good ideas, you won't feel like there's too much to keep track of. Here are some other ideas to get you started:
- Have your child drink more water and milk. Water doesn't have to be boring! Offer kids fizzy water, add an orange slice, or make ice cubes with fun shapes. Growing kids also need milk. Milk gives kids calcium for strong bones and healthy growth. Be sure to give kids under age 2 whole milk, not skim or low-fat. If your child doesn't drink milk, fortified soy beverage (soymilk) is a good alternative, or choose low-fat yogurt as part of a meal or snack.
- Add more fruits and vegetables to your family's table. Fruits and vegetables can taste and look good. They can be easy to prepare and serve. Buy fruits and vegetables fresh, frozen, or canned. Or try growing your own. Serve fresh fruits and vegetables raw. Kids often like the taste of sliced raw fruits and vegetables. Vegetables can also be steamed, roasted, microwaved, or cut up and mixed into stews and soups.
- Limit highly processed foods, added sugars, and refined carbohydrates, such as packaged snacks, sugary drinks, and white bread. These also include foods and drinks like pastries, candy, chips, cookies, cheese-flavored snacks, ice cream, soda, fruit juice drinks, and sports drinks. Offer fruits for desserts and snacks when kids want something sweet. Limit salty snacks. And look for low-sodium or salt-free foods when possible.