Menu

Holiday Baking With Your Toddler

It's beginning to look a lot like winter - with first frosts and early dark, but also bright twinkling lights and seasonal decorations wherever you look. Is it any wonder that we populate the long, cold nights of December with candle light, evergreens and the smells of a myriad festive treats? So many delicious flavours belong firmly at the close of the year - hot chocolate and sweet tea, spiced pies, delicate cookies and savoury roasts, all keeping us cozy and warm as well as full.

Cooking and baking can be a necessary chore, but it can also become a wonderful family activity. Young children may not help with every meal, but holiday treats are the perfect opportunity for them to participate in the profound work of creating something nourishing - and delicious - for the whole family. Not to mention, have lots of fun! The kitchen is an absolute wonderland for a toddler child and harnessing their enthusiasm might end up much more enjoyable, and fruitful, than you might ever expect.

Just keep in mind:

Safety First

Before you get started, look at your workspace with a critical eye - can your toddler handle everything in her reach? She will likely want to try and touch anything you do, so will that include sharp knives or hot stovetops? Are there heavy objects that she might pull onto herself? More often than not, simply explaining and showing the dangers to your child, in advance, will be enough, provided there are other interesting things to keep her busy. With a younger toddler it might also be safer to avoid the step stool (with its risk of fall) and instead set up her own small table, and declare the "adult" countertops firmly out of bounds.

Adjust Your Expectations

What is your toddler's attention span? Can he stay through making the whole recipe? And on that matter, will the recipe handle some extra flour because it was a bit too much fun to pour? It's best to choose forgiving recipes (think oatmeal cookies rather than macaroons) that are not fiddly about ingredients or extra resting time if you need to stop and leave the kitchen for any reason. Also, it might be a good idea to have some extra of each ingredient on hand - but out of reach - in case of accident. No one wants to forgo cookies just because they dropped the egg!

Break it Down

So, what is it that your toddler is actually going to do? Let's gather all of the necessary tools and ingredients; "mise en place" is invaluable to professional chefs and two-year-olds in chef hats alike - and get down to business. Some ideas for youngest children include: washing produce, pouring, spooning or otherwise transferring (you can measure the ingredients in advance), stirring and whisking, scooping and forming (for example, pinching and balling cookie dough), peeling and slicing (tangerines, eggs and bananas are especially popular). Older toddlers can also measure ingredients, crack eggs, shell certain nuts, spread (for example, making jam cookie sandwiches) or sift flour.

Christmas Baking - Montessori toddler child care

Embrace the Mess

It will happen, one way or another. But the good news is, often cleaning up the mess is just as much fun - for your toddler, at least - as the cooking itself. Make sure you have rags, mops and brooms at the ready, and dress to impress, that is, in an apron or clothes that you don't mind getting stained.

Have Fun!

It's not about where you're going, it's about the journey... could be a motto of the toddler age. When banana bread is but a distant promise, your child is here and now, having the time of his life smushing bananas with their hands. This is what treasured memories are made of. So go ahead and smell the roses - or the bananas and spices, as the case may be - and enjoy the moments for what they are.

By Michaela Tuckova

Want to learn more? Read our next article:

HOW TO HELP YOUR TODDLER GET DRESSED

Další články

Reading from a Young Age Matters

A picture is the first content of a book that a child can „read“. Thanks to pictures, a child can understand a story without knowing how to read, interpreting the main figures/animals, the environment, and the situations from the visuals. From illustrated facial expressions and body language the child can also tell emotions.  Enjoying a good book raises a love and passion that is necessary for prereading skills.  

Read more

Future of Education

Radka Dohnalova, a parent of three IMSP children, has been researching the future of education in this world. She has summarized her findings in the article below, which was also recently published. Radka wanted to share the results with the IMSP community when her research revealed how Montessori education aligns with where the future of education is heading.

Read more

Helping your Toddler on their Path of Development

Parents today are constantly surrounded by images and ideas of what their children should or shouldn’t have and it can be overwhelming trying to decide what is best for their child’s development. Every parent wants to make good decisions when it comes to the items you choose to bring into your home, but how do we know which ones are more or less beneficial than others?

Read more

Top 3 Winter Activities for Toddlers

We know that when schools are closed and children are at home for the holidays, it can sometimes be a challenge to come up with new, interesting ideas of things to do with your toddler. Here we have compiled a list of our three favorite winter-themed activities that consist of simple steps and only require materials that you probably already have around the house.

Read more

Our Life in Lockdown

We have all had our fair share of complaining about the situation we have found ourselves in since last Spring, but in this article, I wanted to concentrate on the positives this has brought to us.

Read more
22.12.2017
Join us for an Interactive Open House Register for
Baby & Me
Register for
Toddler & Me
Virtual tour