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By J.M. HIRSCH
Associated Press

Posted on: Wednesday, October 7, 2009

TASTE
Giving vegetables a chance

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Alton Brown, host of the Food Network show "Good Eats," won highest praise from 5-year-old Hirsch for his parsnip muffins recipe.

Associated Press library photo

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Ultra-picky Parker Hirsch tries out a parsnip muffin. He went for it, although the almonds on top had to go.

LARRY CROWE | Associated Press

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Can television chefs make my 5-year-old a better eater?

Having spent too many meals watching my son skirt around the veggies on his plate — or during more pouty dinners, simply shove them off — I wanted to see if the celebrity chefs from the Food Network could persuade him to embrace produce beyond fruit.

After all, when it comes to kids, the network knows its stuff. The Food Network doesn't talk numbers, but children make up a considerable chunk of its viewers.

I called the network and laid it out. I'd give them a profile of my son's eating habits; they'd round up the celebrity chefs who would come up with vegetable-based recipes catered to his (sometimes frustrating) tastes. He'd try them all and declare a winner.

Parker scarfs eel and shrimp tempura sushi, devours Mexican mole and Ethiopian doro wat, and doesn't know there is such a thing as white bread. Yet I can't get him to eat vegetables. Mashed potatoes are fine, but that's the low-hanging fruit of the produce world.

As with so many kids, it hasn't always been this way. From 6 months to 2 years, he ate everything. His favorite greens were palak paneer, a sort of curried spinach. Today, it's "That's disgusting!" if something green is even in his presence.

Supposedly, this is normal. Supposedly, his tastes — especially if he's been exposed to a broad range of foods early on — will expand.

I gave the Food Network chefs some rules: No hidden vegetables allowed. And I gave Parker one: He had to take at least one bite of every dish. The chefs and their dishes were:

• Alton Brown, host of "The Next Iron Chef," took the easy road and offered parsnip muffins. I almost disqualified him because the veggies are tucked inside a baked good.

Parker eyed the sliced almonds on top of the muffin suspiciously, then plucked them off and piled them next to his plate. "Better than I thought it was going to be," he said. "I'd take it for lunch tomorrow. Without the almonds."

• Rachael Ray, of "30 Minute Meals" fame, offered up a bechamel-soaked white lasagna baked in a cast-iron skillet. It also was heavy on green stuff — nearly 3 pounds of chopped spinach and chard. It was savory and cheesy and totally delicious.

"I don't like the green cheese," Parker said as he put a greens-free bite of noodle in his mouth. "Yummy, but not the greatest. I'd like it without the green. Sort of." He never did taste any of the greens, but its proximity to the noodles was enough to sour the experience.

• Alexandra Guarnaschelli, host of "Alex's Day Off," suggested roasted butternut squash soup with popcorn croutons. I considered this a pretty inspired idea. So did Parker.

"Yum! Dad, your recipes are the best!" he said as he slurped it up. Hmm ... Not only did she get him to eat squash, but I also got the credit for it.

• Holly Smith, a contestant on "The Next Iron Chef," tried a recipe that was doomed before it was even made — pappa al pomodoro, a tomato and bread soup served at room temperature. Parker would rather eat wilted greens than touch a tomato.

"No more of this!," he said. "The muffins should be the winner."

• Melissa d'Arabian, host of "Ten Dollar Dinners," bravely offered a cheese-coated creamed spinach. We felt it best to cover this dish so he wouldn't see it until just before taking a bite.

"I knew this was the baddest recipe," he said as he dunked the tip of one fork tine in the cheese sauce. "I'm not eating the green." He was true to his word. We asked him to at least hold a forkful up to his nose and smell, hoping the cheesiness might draw him in.

"No thank you because I might miss and put it in my mouth."

• Finally, there was a vegetable cake from Jehangir Mehta, another contestant on "The Next Iron Chef." Think zucchini bread, but add beets, broccoli, cauliflower and hot paprika. If Mehta could get my kid to eat this, he deserved way more than just being an Iron Chef. But he didn't.

Is anyone surprised that Parker's favorite was the one recipe that least resembled a vegetable? That felt like a shallow victory (sorry, Alton). But I was pleased that the butternut squash soup was so warmly embraced. That was genuine progress.

If children truly dislike something (greens and tomatoes, anyone?), they aren't likely to be won over by cheese sauces or condiments. Parents need to pick their battles and consider other healthy choices. In my case, I'll fight the spinach and tomato battles later.

That means searching for new ingredients and ways of preparing them. Grocers are jammed with numerous and unusual produce choices, making it easy to think beyond the usual suspects.

And don't assume the oft-repeated advice of offering children the same food many times means preparing it the same way over and over. If you offer carrots a different way each time, you're much more likely to hit a winner than repeatedly trying the same recipe.

Parker demonstrated this with Guarnaschelli's squash soup. I've offered him roasted squash plenty of times. I'd never bothered to offer it as a soup because, well, he supposedly doesn't like squash. Clearly, he and I were both wrong.