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Family Healthy Lifestyles Program

Welcome to Information Source for Smart Snacking

Smart snacking is simple and fast!

Snacks eaten between meals can be an important part of your daily food choices from the Food Guide Pyramid.

These general snack ideas are for children age 1 and older, teenagers and even adults.

Snacks count as part of the total calories consumed in a day. They can also be a source of good nutrition. Snacks are a normal part of a healthy diet for growing children; adults also love snacking.

Snacks are a good way to get children to eat fruits and vegetables, whole grains, and low-fat and fat-free milk and milk products.

Examples of some quick and easy snacks:

Bread, Cereal, Rice & Pasta Group

Vegetable Group

Fruit Group

Milk, Yogurt, & Cheese Group

Meat, Poultry, Fish, Dry Beans, Eggs, & Nuts Group

Snacks When You’re Away From Home

Snacks from home can be more nutritious and less costly than snacks bought from a vending machine or a convenience store.

Here are examples of snacks you can bring from home:

Use a cooler or an insulated bag with an ice pack for snacks that need to be kept cold.

Fats, Oils, & Sweets . . . Children and adults should have only small amounts of high-sugar and high-fat foods. These foods provide calories, but little or no vitamins and minerals.

These foods include - fried foods, high-fat snack chips, fruit drinks, sodas, candies, sweet desserts such as cake, pastries, and doughnuts.

How can you get your child to eat low fat snacks? . . . These easy-to-make recipes are a great place to start! Invite your child to help you prepare them, too. Cooking is an excellent way to introduce young children to math skills such as measuring, and science concepts such as how heat and cold change substances. Cooking offers you and your
child a chance to enjoy a project together. Remember to wash your hands and review kitchen safety rules before you begin.

Mexican Snack Pizzas

A low-fat, low-calorie pizza with a Mexican flavor. The beans and whole-wheat muffins
give a fiber boost.

4 servings Per pizza:

Chili Popcorn

Prepare the popcorn in a microwave oven or hot air popper. The small amount of fat added to the popcorn is just enough to make the other seasonings stick to the popped kernels.

Foods that are round, hard, small, thick and sticky, smooth, or slippery should not be offered to children under 4 years of age because of the risk of choking. Examples of such foods include hot dogs, whole grapes, seeds, nuts, popcorn, large pieces of raw carrot, and spoonfuls of peanut butter.

Fruit-Juice Cubes

Are you looking for an afternoon snack that is cool, refreshing, and different? Both children and adults will enjoy these bite-size fruit-juice cubes. They are a good replacement for sugary drinks, which supply almost no vitamins or minerals.

ice-cube trays, with non stick spray.

Other snack ideas

*Be careful. These foods may cause choking, especially in children less than 4-years old. Peanut butter should not be served to children under age 2. When serving peanut butter to children ages 2 to 3, spread it very thinly on foods.