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#25: A Dietitian’s View On Dessert for Kids

Serving dessert probably doesn’t seem that complicated until you have kids. Then you start to wonder, how often should they be having this? When do I offer it? Do they need to finish their dinner in order to get it? Do I want to handle dessert the same way my parents did, or does something feel off about that approach? 

Today’s episode is answering a listener question from Natalie! She’s wondering about when to let her kids have dessert, how often, and whether they need to eat their main dish to get it.

Important note!  This episode is geared towards kids over 2, as I recommend avoiding/limiting treats for babies and 1 year olds.

Welcome back or welcome in if it’s your first time here to Feeding Toddlers Made Easy, I’m Kacie Barnes from Mama Knows Nutrition, an RD with MCN and 2 kids and this is your place to ask your unfiltered questions about feeding your toddlers, I do my best to walk you through with my nutrition and early childhood expertise. Hit the “follow” button on the podcast so that you will always have the mom support you need cuz feeding kids can bring up so many questions and challenges. My website is a fantastic resource to search through for any questions you have, too. Or you want recipes? There’s recipes. We’ve got it all. Let’s hear from Natalie.

Parent Question:

Hi, my name is Natalie and I have three little girls a six-year-old, a four year old and a one-and-half-year-old. My question is, what’s your advice in terms of dessert? You know, I’ve heard somebody else say you shouldn’t tie dessert with how much dinner they’re eating and either it’s dessert night or it’s not a dessert night. I tried that for a while, but something just feels so wrong about giving them dessert, letting them eat dessert, when they didn’t even touch or try or even look at the main dish. It would be one thing if that was every once in a while with my older girls, but with my middle one in particular, the four-year-old, it is literally every meal. 

I put a safe food on her plate. She will almost always eat the fruit or yogurt squeezer, but for the main meal, she will only eat it if it’s some combination of cheese and bread. You know, mac and cheese or cheese quesadilla or grilled cheese. I want her to be able to enjoy dessert sometimes, but I just struggle with when to allow them to eat dessert. So if you have any advice on that, that would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. 

Answer:

Here are my 6 core principles about dessert and I’ll explain why for each one. These are the principles that allow your child to have a healthy relationship with food, still get a nutritious diet overall, and enjoy sweets without overindulging or being completely restricted from having any.

1. Dessert doesn’t have to be earned

2. Dessert doesn’t have to be over the top all the time

3. Dessert can be served WITH a meal (or even before!) instead of after

4. Dessert doesn’t have to be every day, but it can be if you choose

5. Liking or eating dessert does not make a child unhealthy

6. Your child liking or eating dessert does not reflect on how you are doing in your parenting

Final notes

I want to touch on one more thing that Natalie said. She said, “Something just feels so wrong about giving them dessert, letting them eat dessert, and they didn’t even touch or try or even look at the main dish on their plate.”

That’s because you want them to get good nutrients and you feel like it’s important to do that for your children. I’m proud of you for feeling that way. But two things can be true. You can care about them getting what they need, and you can know that eating dessert does not prevent them from getting what they need. It may feel that way sometimes, that it’s preventing them from getting what they need. Especially when I say that dessert can be with or before a meal. But they have the freedom to go ahead and eat more if they are hungry. You do not need to refill their dessert. And they are getting plenty of other meal opportunities where you can load them up with nutritious items.

I’m going to leave it there for today but can talk about dessert again, especially to get into the topic of “how much” since we didn’t get a chance to really dig into that today so we can do that in the future. If you have other questions on dessert or do want to hear about how much, please send me a DM on instagram.

If this episode made you think, answered a question you had, or gave you a new insight you didn’t have before, let me know by giving me a 5-star rating and a review telling me what you got out of this episode that was helpful.

Talk to you next time!

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