How to Get Your Child to Try New Foods Kendal
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How to Get Your Child to Try New Foods
By Supernanny Team 22/08/2007
New research suggests that genetic factors have a big part to play when it comes to our food preferences. The research, by Lucy J Cooke and her colleagues from University College London, reports that food fears – why some children try to avoid unfamiliar foods - are 78 percent inherited. Shared environment has no effect at all, as non-shared environmental factors account for the remaining 22 percent.
“Parents can be reassured that their child’s reluctance to try new foods is not simply the result of poor parental feeding practices, but is partly in the genes,” reports Cooke, in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Researchers studied 10,780 pairs of eight to ten-year-old twins to assess their fears of unfamiliar food - what is called “food neophobia.” Traditionally such fears may have been to do with evolution, as people automatically tried to avoid exposure to something potentially dangerous.
The results for identical twins (which have the same DNA) and fraternal (which don’t) were then compared. Identical twins were far more likely to have the same amount of new-food phobia, suggesting a very strong inherited influence.
“This is a very interesting approach to how we encourage children to eat a wider variety and more of the healthy foods,” says Lizzie Vann, founder of the children’s food company, Organix. “Our experience backs up the research. If you want to encourage young children to try new foods, the two biggest areas to focus on are:
1. Being calm – make the introduction of a new food just part of a normal everyday occurrence. If your child turns it down, don’t make a fuss, just try again, a couple of days later.
2. Eating as big a variety of healthy foods yourself as possible, from the moment of conception! Whilst you are pregnant, and if you breastfeed, your child is what YOU eat – they will be exposed to all the flavours of your foods, and this will impact hugely on what they want to eat themselves. And of course, in the early years, children copy their mums and dads – so if they see you eating lots of fresh fruit, they will feel comfortable doing the same.”
It’s quite a mixed message for parents, as the research suggests that when we fail in our attempts to make our children try new foods, it is our fault – but due to genetic factors, rather than bad parenting! Still, we parents shouldn’t despair too much. The study says that it is possible to reduce new-food fears, if we try hard enough. As Dr Cooke says:
“New foods can become familiar and disliked foods liked, with repeated presentation.”
It sounds like the old mantra: if at first you don't succeed, try, try again.
