
By Jorj Morgan of www.jorj.com
I am thoroughly convinced that my son is planning to be the poster child for the currently defunct disease of long ago sailors - SCURVY. I don't think he has actually chosen to eat a vegetable in at least two years. Okay, maybe that is an exaggeration - but he really could survive on pizza and cold cereal. So, I have found a way to sneak vegetables into some of his favorite dishes. I'll let you in on my secrets, if you promise not to tell.
I heeded the advice of every professional that offered a solution to the "just choose veggies" theory of child rearing. I bought tons of fresh veggies, washing them thoroughly to remove unwanted pesticides. I peeled carrots, ran my fork down the outer skin of a cucumber to make decorative rounds, dyed the stalks of celery in beet juice and carved my cauliflower into delectable flowerets. His response - a jaw clenching "ugh, ugh." I moved every possible snack item from his reach, filling his eye-level refrigerator shelf with pluckable, healthy veggie bites presented in colorful plastic containers. His lunchbox returned home with every painstakingly prepared vegetable stick placed exactly where I had originally packed it that morning. My sculptured haystack of steamed julienne zucchini was a work of art - that went uneaten. I decided to give up! At least he thinks I did. Instead, I decided to get sneaky.
As a substitute for the time spent on forming haystacks, I turned my knife to dicing. I cut the veggies into small pieces that were indiscernible for what they really were. I added finely diced carrots and bell peppers to his spaghetti sauce. Shredded zucchini hid well in zucchini muffins. And, my ultimate sting was sautéed eggplant smooshed into his meatballs. (After all, if Wolfgang can get away with it - why can't I?) Here are a couple of hidden veggie tricks that I am sure you can pull off.
If this smacks of deceit, rest assured - it is. But, it falls into the white lie category that moms are allowed to cross every once in a while. To tell you the truth, my son guessed right off that there was something going on when I stopped trying to force-feed him that celery stick. Now, we a have a fun time guessing the hidden veggie in his favorite food.
Jorj Morgan is the author of five cookbooks, including “Gorgeous! The Sum of All Your Glorious Parts,” “At Home in the Kitchen” and “Fresh Traditions.” She has twenty-five years of entertaining and cooking for her family of three sons, eight nieces and nephews, and hundreds of extended family friends. Visit her website at www.Jorj.com