(Linked HERE)
Make use of wonderful seasonal fruit like peaches by creating an awesome snack of a flower garden.
Reminiscent of our famous flower pot snack, this snack is refreshing and beautiful.
Create three flowers. The first is a turkey breast rosette. Roll up a slice of turkey breast and position atop the celery stem as shown. The second will be your peach. Slice normally and position like a flower as shown. The third will be a strawberry flower. Slick a strawberry into nine sections (or so) and position on the plate to look like a flower.
Serve with some peanut butter for dipping the celery, and you have a lovely and healthy snack!
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:
About this link |
(linked HERE)
Solar System
A great excuse to give our kids a variety of fruits, veggies, meats, and cheeses in one snack (while educating them at the same time), is to make the Solar System with them! Teach your children about the planets in our Solar System (yes, I know Pluto is no longer considered a planet…read on), and give them a healthy snack at the same time!
Using snacks is an amazing way to teach your young child about science. Take a look at our Volcano post for a good example of this!
I found foods to use for each planet first, then I handed each to my daughter one at a time and had her repeat the names of the planets with me in order. As she repeated each one, she laid it on the plate (and I spaced them out a little more for the picture). She normally doesn’t like pepperoni but she ate it with this snack!
Below is a list of which foods I used for each planet:
Sun: mandarin orange, top sliced off and peeled but not separated
Mercury: a red grape
Venus: celery
Earth: kiwi
Mars: strawberry
Jupiter: pepperoni
Saturn: cheddar cheese
Uranus: a slice of string cheese
Neptune: ham
Pluto: (No longer technically a planet) corn
I added Pluto as a way to show my daughter that it was once a part of the solar system but is no longer.
And this one is another solar system I made last week showing the lines of orbit that each planet has.
I prefer the first version, which do you prefer?
The solar system above was made to show how each planet orbits the sun in our galaxy, the milky way.
I made the lines in the photo below as well as the stars in the photos above using this technique:
Variations:
Make your planets out of anything you have in the house that you can cut into circular shapes. Use your own creativity for this one!
If you enjoyed this post, check out our other educational snacks
Volcano Egyptian Pyramids Alphabet Lunch (practice your ABC’s) Stoplight (to learn about traffic rules) The Flood Jonah in the Big Fish David and Goliath Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What do you See? (Includes a lunch and learning activity) Joshua and the Battle of Jericho Snowflake Pancakes (plus 25 great educational activities for the snow)
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.
. . .
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!
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.
(Sharing HERE)
Did you enjoy today’s snack? Learn more about this blog here.
Volcano
Volcanoes and lava have been of particular interest lately in our home. My daughter can’t stop investigating how volcanoes work by watching Youtube videos featuring lava flows, volcanic explosions, and all thing volcano.
This volcano was made in honor of my daughter’s recent fascination with lava. The volcano is a grilled cheese sandwich, the lava is ketchup (used for dipping) and the ground below is some rice leftover from last night’s dinner.
Simply cut your grilled cheese sandwich into a triangle, squeeze your ketchup to look like lava, and add something for the ground beneath the volcano.
Teach your children how volcanoes work by showing them this video:
Variations:
Use celery for the ground beneath the volcano for a healthier option.
Hope you enjoy!