How to Encourage Kids to Get Engaged in the Kitchen: Action Plan

As children have a naturally innate curiosity about food, cooking, and food preparation, kitchens are extremely exciting, experiential, and learning laboratories for them. They can learn so easily just by activating their senses— touch, taste, feel, smell, and sound—and the kitchen supports this in spades. When kids are given the opportunity to mix, stir, knead, spread, toss, squeeze, and pour, they are soaking up new knowledge about food, ingredients, preservation, cooking, and cleaning up without realizing it. These are all paramount skills that will help them become self-sufficient, adventurous eaters, and health-aware later in life.

We know that cooking with kids can be messy, while also taking more time and requiring more patience. But many experts agree that the efforts are worth it. On a psychological level, cooking encourages kids to feel good, accomplished, and proud of themselves. So let’s go through some of the practical ways we can engage kids in the kitchen!

Start at the grocery store

Encourage your child to pick out some of the vegetables and other ingredients you are going to cook together. Discuss why foods like fruits and vegetables are important to our health. Read the nutrition labels together and talk about the different nutrients and their values and health benefits.

Older kids can be introduced to reading recipes all the way through, cleaning the counters and their hands, setting up the countertops with all utensils that will be needed, and gathering all ingredients before starting to cook. Being organized in the kitchen is a big part of cooking success and will ultimately help kids feel good about themselves.

Many parents forget that kids are actually eager to lend a hand, especially when you start them young. Always encourage them by saying, “You are a big help, you can do this, and you are so valuable in this process!”

Age-Appropriate Cooking Activities

Always consider the age of the child and assign jobs they can safely do. Every child is different and possesses a unique set of skills, so consider developmental level and abilities when assigning kitchen duties.

Babies:
Obviously babies can’t help with the cooking, but they still enjoy being with their parents—observing, witnessing, and experiencing the sights, sounds, smells, and tastes of the kitchen. While moving around the kitchen preparing food, keep your baby in their highchair or another safe place, and just talk to them. Explain to them what you are doing, tell them about the foods you’re preparing and the utensils you’re using. Stimulate an activity that makes them feel involved such as giving them a separate bowl and spoon, and letting them mix and stir foods that are safe for them to eat. Show them different foods and allow them to touch and taste those that are safe by placing small pieces of cooked ingredients on their high-chair tray. This also helps them practice self-feeding.

Age 2:
This period is about learning to use the large muscles in their arms which can be stimulated with these activities:

  • unpacking light grocery bags

  • preparing and moving ingredients from one place to another

  • wiping counters and tabletops

  • measuring ingredients

  • rinsing fruit and veggies

  • snapping fresh beans with a kid-friendly knife

  • exploring different utensils and explaining their purposes

  • breaking cauliflower, broccoli, lettuce, or bread

  • bringing the safe and unbreakable items to the dinner table

Age 3:
Kids in this age group are learning how to use their hands and what to do with them, so give the following a try:

  • pouring liquids and mixing ingredients (hint: use extra-large bowls to contain the mess)

  • if you are not afraid of the mess, allow kids to put spreads on veggies or slices of bread, such as butter, peanut butter, or sauces

  • putting slices of lemon and garlic on top of salmon

  • wrapping potatoes in foil for baking

  • kneading bread, cookie, or pasta dough

  • playing with simple shaping and cutting with a cookie cutters

  • adding pre-measured herbs to salads or dressings

  • putting trash in the garbage

Ages 4 – 5:
The challenge for kids at this age is to control the smaller muscles in their fingers, so encourage them to practice that by:

  • setting the table

  • measuring dry and liquid ingredients

  • peeling loose-skinned oranges, bananas, and hard-boiled eggs that have cooled down

  • mixing cereal or muesli with milk

  • rolling bananas in cereal or dipping them in peanut butter for a snack

  • forming round shapes with hands

  • putting our Kvaroy Arctic salmon dogs in buns

  • making smoked salmon bagels or sandwiches with cream cheese or butter

  • mashing soft fruits or cooked vegetables with a fork

  • beating eggs with an eggbeater or whisk

  • cutting parsley, green onions, or dried fruits with dull scissors

  • cutting soft veggies or fruit with a blunt knife on a cutting board

  • adding ketchup and other sauces to food

  • clearing the dinner table

Ages 6 – 8:
This age level is ready to learn tasks such as:

  • cleaning surfaces before and after use

  • washing fruit and veggies

  • unpacking food such as salmon wrapped in paper

  • gathering utensils and ingredients

  • greasing or spraying baking pans

  • peeling onions and garlic

  • grating cheese

  • light chopping

  • opening cans (have you tried our canned, smoked, and sustainable salmon?)

  • whisking and mixing ingredients

  • advanced measuring

  • kneading dough

  • cracking eggs

  • melting butter

  • washing dishes and putting away ingredients and utensils

Ages 9 – 12:
Kids in this age group still need adult supervision, but they can manage jobs such as:

  • following a recipe and measuring ingredients accurately

  • planning and preparing simple meals and snacks

  • reading and understanding ingredients and food labels

  • using a peeler

  • plating salmon with side dishes

  • operating small appliances like blenders, mini-choppers, juicers, and microwave ovens—again it’s important to demonstrate first how to use each of them and observe for safety

  • sautéing, steaming, broiling, boiling, and baking

  • developing safe knife skills through moderate chopping, dicing, and cutting

  • taking care of and storing ingredients

  • preserving leftovers

  • cleaning up, knowing how and what to hand wash or wash in the dishwasher

Teens:
By adolescence, kids are making most of their own decisions about food and are capable of:

  • comfortably preparing recipes that require multiple preparation steps

  • experimenting and creating new flavor combinations, shapes, or decorations

  • planning and preparing whole menus for special occasions

  • making shopping lists and shopping for ingredients

  • helping younger children learn about food and how to prepare it

  • enjoying cooking with family and friends

Kitchen Safety Tips

Cooking is fun when it’s safe! Parents need to introduce kids to basic kitchen safety tips, some of which are mentioned below. Going through different activities, guiding, explaining, and showing them are the first steps that will set your kids up for success:

  • Remind them to always hands with soap before, during, and after handling food

  • Teach them that cooking starts and finishes with cleaning all countertops and utensils after every use

  • Explain why it’s safer not to wear loose-fitting clothes in the kitchen and to pin up long hair

  • Guide them in using clean utensils for different foods, especially items like cutting boards and knives that have come in contact with raw meats, poultry, fish, or eggs

  • There should always be adult supervision when working with hot liquids, knives, the stove, and other potentially dangerous equipment

  • Always use pot holders when handling hot pans, pots, and dishes

  • Teach them how to use the oven safely

  • When explaining safety, highlight that they should never leave a hot stove unattended.

  • Keep hot foods and liquids away from the edges of counters and tables

  • Check out these tips on grilling with kids

  • If you must climb to get food and utensils that are stored out of reach, always use a sturdy stool

  • Chew carefully and slowly, learn ways to avoid choking

  • Practice the Heimlich maneuver, which can save the life of someone who is choking

Books That Encourage Children to Cook

Books can inspire and teach children of all ages and their parents as well! Here is a great selection of books that encourage kids to cook and show them how to do it.

  • Kids Cooking: a Very Slightly Messy Manual (with plastic measuring spoons) by Jim M’Guinness

  • Someone’s in the Kitchen with Mommy by Elaine Magee

  • Williams-Sonoma Kids Cooking: Scrumptious Recipes for Cooks Ages 9 to 13

  • Cooking with Children (for age 7 and up) by Marion Cunningham

  • Pancakes for Breakfast by Tomie Depaola

  • Little Red Hen by Paul Galdone

  • Stone Soup by Heather Forest

  • Betty Crocker Kids Cook! by Betty Crocker

  • Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs by Judi Barrett

  • Pretend Soup and Other Real Recipes: a Cookbook for Preschoolers & Up by Mollie Katzen