Recent in Recipes

How to Make Healthy, Kid-Friendly Muffins with Your Family

Let’s face it, getting kids to choose and eat foods that are healthy can be difficult. While some kids are born foodies and love to eat their vegetables, others are less inclined to step outside their chicken nugget comfort zone. One great way to get less adventurous eaters excited about healthy food choices is to get them involved in the cooking or baking process.

This batch of healthy, kid-friendly muffins is a great introductory recipe. Your kids will love that they’re being invited to make something that resembles cupcakes for breakfast—and parents will appreciate the fact that there are plenty of nutritious ingredients inside.

What Makes Kids Leery About Trying New Foods?

What often makes kids (and even adults) resistant to eating new foods is the aspect of the unknown. They don’t know what’s in the food, they don’t know how it’s made and it may look different from the foods they’re accustomed to eating. By bringing kids into the kitchen, they’ll not only learn the important life skill of cooking but will gain a sense of understanding about the food that’s being served to them. Plus, they get to make a mess! That’s something all kids can get on board with—right?

Find more secret tricks to help picky eaters.

Skills Your Child Will Learn

Beyond exposing kids to new ingredients, flavors and textures, making healthy homemade muffins offers young bakers the opportunity to develop a number of important skills. For toddlers, baking muffins can be an opportunity to practice fine motor skills as they help stir, pour and sprinkle ingredients. Meanwhile, young children can practice measuring and counting and older children can refine their reading skills and practice math such as addition, division, multiplication, fractions and unit conversions.

How to Make Healthy Kid-Friendly Muffins

Muffin ingredients

Here’s a condensed version of this recipe for Wheat Germ Streusel Banana Muffins from Volunteer Field Editor Trisha Kruse.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup whole wheat flour
  • 1/3 cup packed brown sugar
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1-1/3 cups mashed ripe bananas (about 3 medium)
  • 1 egg
  • 2 tablespoons canola oil
  • 2 tablespoons unsweetened applesauce

Streusel Topping:

  • 2 tablespoons packed brown sugar
  • 2 tablespoons toasted wheat germ
  • 1/4 cup rolled oats
  • 1/8 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 tablespoon cold butter
  • 2 tablespoons finely chopped walnuts

Editor’s Tip: Don’t have wheat germ? You can pulse oats in the food processor instead.

Instructions

Step 1: Mix dry ingredients

mashing bananas for healthy muffins with toddler

In a large bowl, combine the flours, brown sugar, baking powder, baking soda and salt.

Let toddlers help gather ingredients from the pantry and add them to the mixing bowl. Your older kids can practice weighing and measuring ingredients and reading the recipe step-by-step as you work.

Learn more about the best kitchen tasks for kids of every age.

Step 2: Blend wet ingredients and combine

mix wet and dry ingredients for healthy muffins

Kids of all ages will enjoy taking turns mashing up the bananas! Practice counting and sharing by having the whole family count aloud as each child gets to mash the bananas five times before passing onto the next child.

In a separate bowl, beat together the mashed bananas, egg, oil and applesauce until well combined. Stir the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients just until moistened. Be careful to not overmix the batter.

Step 3: Prepare your muffin pan

Coat a muffin tin with cooking spray or use paper liners. Little bakers can help place paper liners into the muffin tins. Help them count as they add each liner or identify their color if using multi-colored liners. Older children can help fill the muffin cups two-thirds full with batter.

Editor’s Tip: For kid-size muffins, you can use a mini muffin tin. They’ll love that the muffins are specially sized just for them!

Step 4: Make the streusel topping

sprinkling streusel topping with a toddler over healthy muffin batter in standard and mini muffin tins

To finish, blend the brown sugar, wheat germ, rolled oats and cinnamon together. While a fork or pastry blender are cleaner methods for blending streusel topping, using (clean) hands is way more fun. For a great sensory activity, let children take turns crumbling together the streusel topping with (we repeat, clean) hands. They’ll love being authorized to make a mess!

The streusel mixture should resemble pea-sized crumbs. Gently fold in the in walnuts, and then generously sprinkle evenly over the muffin batter.

Step 5: Bake

healthy kid-friendly muffin batter in standard and mini muffin tins topped with streusel topping

Bake at 375° for 18-22 minutes for standard-size muffins and 12-15 minutes for mini muffins. The muffins are ready when golden and a toothpick comes out clean when inserted into the center of each muffin. For a good math and time lesson, help children determine what time the muffins will be ready by having them add the baking time to the current time on your oven’s clock.

Cool for 5 minutes before removing from the pan and transferring to a wire rack. Let cool completely before storing in an airtight container.

Editor’s Tip: The downtime during baking is also a good time to have children help with cleanup tasks like washing dishes, wiping up spills and sweeping crumbs from the floor.

close-up of healthy muffins made with kids

Ideas for Making This Recipe Even More Fun

The best part about baking and cooking with your kids is being able to spark their imagination. Don’t feel like you need to be boxed in by the recipe above. Experiment with your kids by letting them add other ingredients to this recipe. Divide the batter and try a few different versions and discuss how each ingredient changed the outcome of the muffins.

It’s a great science lesson in cause and effect that allows kids to explore new, healthy ingredients while helping parents understand their kids’ taste preferences.

Experiment with These Other Ingredients

  • Blueberries: Add 1/2 cup of fresh blueberries to the batter.
  • Diced Apple: Add 1/2 cup of peeled and finely diced apple to the batter.
  • Flax Seeds or Chia Seeds: Add 2 tablespoons of flax seeds to the batter or streusel.
  • Grated Carrots or Zucchini: Add 1/2 cup of grated carrots or zucchini to the batter.
  • Nut Butter: Replace the canola oil with 2 tablespoons of natural peanut butter, almond butter, cashew butter or tahini.
  • Oat Flour: Replace 1 cup of all-purpose flour with 1-1/3 cups of oat flour in the batter.
  • Shredded Coconut: Add 1/2 cup shredded coconut to the batter or streusel.

For more at-home culinary experiments, check out these cooking kits for kids. We especially love Baketivity!

More Fun Things to Bake with Kids
1 / 34
https://www.tasteofhome.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Lemony-Gingerbread-Whoopie-Pies_EXPS_HPLZ17_50509_C06_02_5b-400x400.jpg 400w, https://www.tasteofhome.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Lemony-Gingerbread-Whoopie-Pies_EXPS_HPLZ17_50509_C06_02_5b-180x180.jpg 180w, https://www.tasteofhome.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Lemony-Gingerbread-Whoopie-Pies_EXPS_HPLZ17_50509_C06_02_5b-10x10.jpg 10w, https://www.tasteofhome.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Lemony-Gingerbread-Whoopie-Pies_EXPS_HPLZ17_50509_C06_02_5b.jpg 1200w" title="Lemony Gingerbread Whoopie Pies">

Lemony Gingerbread Whoopie Pies

These spiced-just-right whoopie pies combine two popular flavors in one fun treat. The moist cookies are rolled in sugar before baking for a bit of crunch. —Jamie Jones, Madison, Georgia
Strawberry Muffin Cones

Strawberry Muffin Cones

This is a delightful, fun way to serve a cupcake. I share these with the neighborhood kids and they love the ice cream cone look and ease of eating. Adults who try them say snacking on them makes them feel like kids again. —Barb Kietzer, Niles, Michigan
Root Beer Cookies

Root Beer Cookies

When it's too difficult to take along root beer floats on a picnic, take these cookies instead! I've found the flavor is even better the next day. The hard part is convincing my family to wait that long before sampling them.—Violette Bawden, West Valley City, Utah
Rocky Road Cookie Cups

Rocky Road Cookie Cups

Traditional rocky road ice cream has nuts, marshmallows and chocolate. Using prepared cookie dough makes it easy to put the flavors together in these fast, kid-friendly cups. —Charlotte McDaniel, Jacksonville, AL
Melt-In-Your-Mouth Lemon Cutouts

Melt-In-Your-Mouth Lemon Cutouts

Full of lemony flavor, these cookies are great for any time of year and always popular with family and friends.—Patricia C. Quinn, Omaha, Nebraska
Miniature Peanut Butter Treats

Miniature Peanut Butter Treats

This recipe is one of my family's favorites, and I make the treats a lot, especially at Christmas. I have three children and eight grandchildren, and every one of them loves those "peanut butter thingies," as the grandchildren call them! —Jodie McCoy, Tulsa, Oklahoma
Candy Cupcakes

Candy Cupcakes

Rich chocolaty cupcakes include a cream cheese surprise. Get kids in on the fun by letting them help decorate. ‐Mrs. Walter Jacobson, Ashland, Ohio
Peanut Butter Kiss Cookies

Peanut Butter Kiss Cookies

Baking peanut butter kiss cookies to share doesn't get much easier than this. Stir together four ingredients. Bake. Top with a kiss. Done! Your family will love this Hershey's peanut butter blossom cookie recipe. —Dee Davis, Sun City, Arizona
Chocolate-Raspberry Cutout Cookies

Chocolate-Raspberry Cutout Cookies

When my daughter, Katie, was 2, the juicy, ripe raspberries in my backyard inspired me to create this cutout cookie. It's become a mother-daughter tradition to pick the raspberries, choose the cutter shapes, cut out the cookies and frost them. —Cindy Beberman, Orland Park, Illinois
Oreo Cupcakes with Cookies and Cream Frosting

Oreo Cupcakes with Cookies and Cream Frosting

Kids and adults alike will find these Oreo cupcakes irresistible. If you want to pipe the frosting, be sure to thoroughly crush the cookies. —Taste of Home Test Kitchen, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
S'mores Brownies

S'mores Brownies

Our family simply adores our daughter's fudgy s'mores brownies. The cinnamon graham cracker crust and dark chocolate brownies bring our passion for s'mores to a whole new level! —Jennifer Gilbert, Brighton, Michigan
Confetti Cake Batter Cookies

Confetti Cake Batter Cookies

Mom and I took up cake decorating. Funfetti was our favorite cake, so we used the mix to make cutout cookies. Plain or decorated, they’re a fave at parties. —Danielle DeMarco, Basking Ridge, New Jersey
Jelly Bean Cookies

Jelly Bean Cookies

It's a family tradition for my grandmother and me to make these colorful cookies every year for the holidays. —Cheyenne Fink, Pleasantville, Pennsylvania
Miniature Castle Cakes

Miniature Castle Cakes

You can easily make several of these pretty palaces with a boxed cake mix, canned frosting and a few common confections. Grab a goblet of milk and enjoy one with your prince of princess. —Taste of Home Test Kitchen, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Bite-Sized Apple Pies

Bite-Sized Apple Pies

These little bites are fun for kids to make. Simply wrap strips of pastry around apple wedges and shake on some cinnamon-sugar. Then just bake and watch them disappear! —Taste of Home Test Kitchen, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Frosted Butter Cutout Cookies

Frosted Butter Cutout Cookies

I have fond memories of baking and frosting these cutout cookies with my mom. Now I carry on the tradition with my kids. It's a messy but fun day! —Sandy Nace, Greensburg, Kansas
Waffle-Iron Cookies

Waffle-Iron Cookies

The recipe for these cookies is the easiest to find in my book because it's a beautiful mess. It's covered with fingerprints, flour smudges and memories of more than 30 Christmases! I made these with my daughters, and now I make them with my granddaughters. —Judy Taylor, Quarryville, Pennsylvania
Berry Brownie Pizza

Berry Brownie Pizza

How could you not love pizza for dessert? A fudgy brownie base gets a whipped topping sauce and is topped with fresh strawberries, chopped nuts and a drizzle of chocolate syrup. —Karen Heleski, Ubly, Michigan
Shortbread Sandwich Cookies

Shortbread Sandwich Cookies

I layer a creamy, coffee-flavored filling between buttery shortbread, then dip the sandwiches in chocolate. Guests always love them.—Bertha Seyer, Oak Ridge, Missouri
Jelly Donut Cake

Jelly Donut Cake

Cake. Doughnuts. Now you don't have to choose between the two. Impress your family with this easy jelly-filled cake. Try your best to center the jelly in the middle of the half-filled Bundt pan so that it will not leak out the edges of the cake.—Colleen Delawder, Herndon, Virginia

The post How to Make Healthy, Kid-Friendly Muffins with Your Family appeared first on Taste of Home.



source https://www.tasteofhome.com/article/healthy-kid-friendly-muffins/

Subscribe to receive free email updates:

Related Posts :

0 Response to "How to Make Healthy, Kid-Friendly Muffins with Your Family"

Post a Comment