Variations:
Create a larger kite using a banana for the outline and fruit for the colorful filling. Use yogurt to draw a string.
Use yogurt or whipped cream for a cloud.
Make this into a dessert by making the kite out of a s’more or a brownie/bar you have on hand.
Do you own a kite? Last summer, we took the girls to a kite festival. They got to see professional kite flyers putting on a great air show. There was music, and even a chance for the kids to make their own kites. Granted, the kites they got to make were only out of paper, but it was a great way to introduce the kids to all that kites can do when flown right!
To create this kite lunch, take a peanut butter sandwich and cut a diamond. Next, slice a baby carrot into thin sections to create the criss cross over the kite. To make the string, slice a banana into a thin strip, and place strawberries over it to look like bows.
Show that the kite is in the sky by adding a bird made of sliced apples and a puffy cottage cheese cloud.
Snail
I love the idea of using bright, colorful fruit to recreate some of the beautiful scenes we see in nature. Although snail shells are not known to be this bright, the two colors I used contrast themselves to show the beautiful pattern that these shells naturally have.
Slice a banana in half lengthwise to make the snail’s body. Place a ground of oatmeal beneath him.
Add a raisin eye and a sliced blueberry for a mouth. Use a tiny bit of the other half of the banana for some antennae.
For the shell, use contrasting fruits like raspberries and grapes to form a swirly shell look as shown above.
This one is great to make after reading a book like this:
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Dragon Fly
Try this super easy dragonfly lunch with your kids today!
To make him, slice a banana lengthwise for the body.
Make a peanut butter sandwich and cut all four wings out of the going lengthwise. There will be just enough sandwich to make all four wings.
Place two wings on each side of the banana, add some arms and antennae with some thinly sliced cheddar cheese, and you are done!
Serve with fresh fruit for a great lunch.
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For a little something extra, show your child how a dragonfly uses each of its four wings independently with this video! I didn’t know that each wing actually moved on its own!
Hello Kitty
Hello Kitty is a simple yet pretty lunch to make. I chose to make her with a peanut butter sandwich, cut into an oval with two pointy ears, a strawberry bow, black bean eyes, and a banana nose. For her whiskers, I thinly sliced some apples and placed them into little grooves I had cut into the sandwich. The grooves really help the apples to stay in place. My little girl really enjoyed this one, I hope your little one does too!
Variations:
Bow: watermelon, raspberries
Eyes: raisins, blueberries
Nose: a slice of white string cheese, a dab of yogurt
(linked HERE)
Hot air balloon
Hot air balloon: The basket is a graham cracker, ropes are string cheese thinly cut, balloon circle is made from a banana cut in half lengthwise and made to look like a circle, interior is strawberries and celery. The clouds are cottage cheese and the people are carrots with raisins cut into fourths!
(linked HERE)
Flower Pot Snack
When my daughter and I first started making food art, one of the first creative snacks we thought of was this basket of flowers.
The best thing about making a flower arrangement is that it is totally customizable. You can make flower out of just about any nutritious food. Fruits and vegetables are especially perfect because of their bright, beautiful colors.
I like this snack because of the variety of food groups represented, as well as the way it showcases the beautiful colors of the fruits and veggies.
Other great foods to use for flowers:
strawberries
peaches
nectarines
avocado
watermelon
apples
avocado
bell pepper
hummus: pipe onto plate with a beautiful tip using your cake decorating supplies!
Use your imagination! I’m sure you will come up with a fantastic plate! Make one today!
If you enjoyed this snack, you might like our other flower snacks, as well as our nature inspired snacks and everyday scenes.
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Disney’s "Up" Lunch
One of our favorite Disney movies is their film”Up”. It is a such a good movie to watch with the kids. We love making cute snacks to go along with our favorite Disney movies like we did for with Mike Wazowski from Monster’s Inc, Mickey Mouse,
was so creative, and what I love about having lots of fruits and vegetables in the house is the ability to take all those colors and use them to create something like this. The balloons are made of bananas, green grapes, strawberries, blueberries, carrots, and red grapes. Shape each fruit or veggie like a circle. Next, make your house. I used half of a graham cracker and a triangle Triscuit cracker for the roof. Windows are made of thin wheels of string cheese. I took that same string cheese and peeled it into thin pieces to use as the strings for the balloons. Finish off the house with a banana wheel cut into a rectangle shape, and you have a fabulous and colorful “Up” lunch.
(linked HERE)
Healthy Dessert: Airplane
This is a dessert. Make an airplane by slicing a banana in half lengthwise, then taking one of the halves and slicing it at a slight angle about 2/3 of the way through. Arrange the pieces to look like a plane. Add halved brown M&M’s for the windows, half a strawberry for a tail, and whipped cream from a can for the jet stream and the clouds. The kids won’t be able to resist!
The Friendly Mr. Owl
Meet the friendly Mr. Owl. His head/body is a peanut butter sandwich, his eyes are Ritz crackers with blueberries, wings and strawberries. His beak and feet are carrots, and the moon is a banana. I created those stars by placing some plain yogurt in my cake-decorating bag and using the star shaped tip. I’m not gonna lie, that was going a little above and beyond, You could easily just dab the yogurt on with a small spoon if you want to recreate this guy!
Jesus on the Cross
Made on Good Friday, Jesus is made out of a baby carrot. The main body lies flat because the carrot was sliced in half. Jesus’ eyes are tiny bits of raisin, his crown of thorns – pretzels, and the cross is a peanut butter sandwich cut into the right shape. The hill is made of banana.
Grace (age 4) actually asked me to make this one as we had talked all day that day about what Good Friday was about. To her, this was not morbid or disturbing in any way; rather, it was a beautiful reminder of the amazing love that God had for us sending His son Jesus to die for us in this way. It was the love of our savior in the form of our lunch.