Toddler Tips

Children love to help adults cook and there isn't anything children can't learn through cooking.
• They practice motor skills such as scrubbing, tearing, pouring, rolling, kneading, peeling, cutting, grating, slicing, spreading and shaking.
• Their language development is enhanced through discussions while cooking, reading the picture recipe, following directions, sequencing and making comparisons.
• Mathematic is learned through counting, measuring, classification and number recognition.
• Science is learned through discussions about how food changes during the cooking process. They learn about hot and cold, floating and sinking, dissolving, evaporation, browning, leavening, melting and freezing.
• Social skills are developed by having to take turns, work together to complete the cooking project, and learning how to share responsibilities.

2 Year Olds Can...
• Scrub food.
• Tear, break or snap foods.
• Dip food items.

3 Year Olds Can...
• Put toppings on a pizza.
• Add decorations to cookies.
• Wrap foil around potatoes.
• Press dough into a pan.
• Cut out biscuits.
• Pour milk or juice (practice first at the sink).
• Stir with hands (bowl should be twice the
size of the mixture.)
• Shake pudding or mix in a ziplock bag.
• Crack nuts in a heavy plastic bag with a mallet.
• Grease baking pans.

4 Year Olds Can...
Peel eggs, corn and tangerines.
Scrape carrots.
Roll and flatten biscuit dough.
Juice fruits.

Crack eggs usng a plate or flat bowl.
Spread soft peanut butter with dull knives.
Mash egg yolks for deviled eggs.
Cut soft fruit, cheese or vegetables with a
knife.
Roll cookie dough into balls.
Arrange fruits, sandwiches and crackers
on a plate.
Mix a salad.

5 Year Olds Can...
Measure ingredients.
Stir with a spoon.
Beat eggs using a fork, whisk or egg beater.
Grind cranberries or apples.
Grate cheese or carrots.
Knead bread dough.
Learn to use small knives safely under  supervision.
Mash or sieve cooked apples.
Grind cooked vegetables or fruits in a food mill.

 

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