Family enjoying playful dinner together at home

Letting Your Child Play with Food Can Be a Good Thing

August 27, 2025 Children

sofia's story Letting Your Child Play with Food Can Be a Good Thing

You may have heard (or even said yourself), “Don’t play with your food!” But what if playing with food actually helped your child learn and grow?

It turns out that letting your child touch, mash, and explore their food can be good for their brain, help them try new foods, and even make mealtimes easier for everyone.

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Food Helps Your Child How Playing with Food Helps Your Child
Child smiling while helping mom prepare vegetables
It helps their brain grow.

Young children learn by using their senses—seeing, smelling, touching, and tasting. When they play with food, they learn about shapes, colors, textures, and even words. A study showed that toddlers who played with food learned words about food textures (like “soft” or “squishy”) faster than kids who didn’t.

Child smiling, holding broccoli like glasses
It helps them try new foods.

Kids who feel comfortable touching and playing with food are more likely to taste it. Playing with food can help picky eaters feel relaxed at the table and more open to trying new things. Food art—like making fun faces or shapes with fruits and veggies—can also make meals more fun.

Father and child making silly faces at table
It gives them a sense of control.

Sometimes, mealtimes feel like a battle between parents and kids. But for kids, refusing to eat might be their way of feeling in control. When we stop forcing bites and allow some play, kids may feel less pressure and be more curious. That can lead to more eating—on their own terms.

Mother and daughter play with bell pepper slices
It builds creativity.

When kids are allowed to explore food with fewer rules, they can enjoy meals more. They might stack veggies, dip foods in sauces, or invent games using their plate. As long as table manners are safe and respectful, a little fun can go a long way.

Easy Ways to Let Kids Play with Food

GIVE FOOD PLAY A TRY WITH THESE FUN IDEAS:

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1. Let them help cook

Even little ones can help in the kitchen. Let them stir, mash, or hand you ingredients. Babies can watch from a highchair while you cook.

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2. Make fun food

Try creating playful meals like:

  • Fruit caterpillars
  • Banana palm trees
  • Veggie boats

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3. Take them shopping

Make grocery shopping more fun. Try a scavenger hunt for older kids. Younger ones may enjoy the colors and smells at a farmer’s market.

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4. Draw their food

Have your child draw what’s for dinner. Then ask silly questions: What if the carrot was hot pink? What if peas were fluffy?

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5. Match colors

Put a box of crayons on the table. Can your child find a crayon to match the food colors on their plate? What colors are missing from their plate? What foods could they try that are that color?

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6. Taste test

Have your child close their eyes and guess what they’re eating. Try mixing foods together to see what flavors and textures they like. What tastes do they like the best? What do they not enjoy eating and why? How does mixing one food with another change the taste?

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7. Listen to food

Ask your child what sounds food makes as they chew—like squishy potatoes or crunchy carrots.

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8. Feel the food

Put fruits or veggies in a paper bag. Let your child reach in and guess what they feel:

  • Fuzzy = kiwi fruit, peach
  • Smooth = tomato, apple
  • Bumpy = orange, mandarin
  • Squishy = banana
  • Small, Round = grape
  • Hard = apples, potatoes

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9. Make smoothies

Let your child help make a smoothie. Blend berries, milk, and bananas in a blender or food processor. Use a silly straw or fun cup to make it an extra special smoothie.

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10. Eat the alphabet

Choose foods that match letters. For example:

  • C-A-T: corn, apple, tomato
  • D-O-G: dates, orange, grapes
Make silly sounds for each letter as they eat.

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11. Pick your own food

Visit a farm, Farmers’ Market, or pick-your-own orchard. Or consider starting a small herb or vegetable garden at home. Kids who touch food in its natural state are more likely to eat it later.

Toddler joyfully eating spaghetti with fork

Final Thought

Letting your child play with their food may be messy—but it can also help them grow, learn, and eat new foods. Try a few of these ideas and see how food can turn into fun!