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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. |
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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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