8 Tips to Help Kids Eat Fruits & Veggies! Featuring: Vegan Spinach Lasagna..
8 Tips to Help Kids Eat Fruits & Veggies! Featuring: Vegan Spinach Lasagna.
Many mommies & daddies ask me how we get our Toddler to eat Fruits & Veggies!
Well let me tell ya… our lil toddler is the pickiest eater I have ever met! If we can get our lil munchkin to eat his fruits and veggies… So can you!
8 Tips to Help Kids Eat Fruits & Veggies!
1) Involve Kids in Growing & Preparing Food:
- Involve your child in Gardening Fruits & Veggies.
- If possible, teach kids to cut and/or peel food.
- Let kids pour the water & measure liquids, etc…
- Be creative and find various ways kids can be physically involved in food prep.
2) Go Grocery Shopping with Your Kids!
- Allow your kids to pick which fruits & veggies they would like to eat and/or try.
- Choices are empowering!
- Choices minimize power struggles.
- Kids love making their own food decisions.
3) Use Colors, Shapes, Sizes & Fun Names!
- Kids love fun & vibrant colors!
- Cut in bite sized pieces that are fun to eat & dip.
- Name the dish fun names like Princess Aurora Peaches/Super Man Power Food!
- Kids love dipping their fruits & veggies!
- Vegan Ranch, Almond Butter, Peanut Butter.
- Vegan Cheese Dip (Cashew Cheese).
- Hummus, Tahini, Bean Dip.
- Use any sauce you know they love.
- Above pic is Blended veggies & cashew cheese.
5) Play with Your Food!
- Create Fun Shapes & Silly Faces.
- Allow kids to pick recipes from a book/online.
- Buy them a Children’s Recipe Book.
- Find an online Cooking App that is fun for kids.
6) Find Books that Relate to Picky Eaters!
- Green Eggs & Ham!
- Just Two More Bites!
- D.W. The Picky Eater!
7) Get Creative with Food Textures!
- Shakes: Add fruits & veggies to coconut, almond, hazelnut milk.
- Salad: Zucchini Zoodle Salad, chopped salads.
- Vegetable Pancakes: Mix veggies in pancakes.
- Muffins: Zucchini, Banana, Carrot, Vegetables.
- Juice Blends: Mixed Greens, Apples, Berries, OJ.
- Mix Veggies into Pasta dishes or Raw Dishes.
8) Be a Great Role model!
- Have healthy choices in your fridge.
- Are you eating junk food then telling your kids to eat healthy food?
- Have every choice in your refrigerator and pantry be a healthy choice!
- Make Healthy Food a fun experience!
- Eat all colors of the rainbow so kids get all Phytonutrients!
- Ounce for ounce & calorie for calorie- BROCCOLI & KALE HAVE MORE PROTEIN THAN PORTERHOUSE STEAK!
- Create low sugar meals to keep meals healthy!
Here is a Recipe for Spinach Lasagna!
Ingredients:
Gluten Free (Oven Ready) Lasagna Noodles
25 oz. Vegan Vanilla Yogurt (I use coconut yogurt)
16 oz. Black or Pinto Beans (cooked)
3 Cups of Fresh Spinach
2 – 3 Cups of Daiya Cheese (minimum)
1 tsp. Ground Cumin
30 oz. Tomato Sauce
Vegan Parmesan Cheese
Instructions for Spinach Lasagna!
- Mash beans open in bottom of 9 X 13 Dish.
- Sprinkle Ground Cumin over the Beans.
- Pour some Tomato Sauce over the Beans.
- Place Lasagna Noodles on top of the Sauce.
- Smear Vanilla Yogurt over the Noodles.
- Create a layer of Spinach on top of the Yogurt.
- Layer the Vegan Cheese over the Spinach.
- Keep recreating layers until you reach the top.
- *Each noodle needs sauce to cook properly!
- Bake at 350 degrees for about an hour.
ADDITIONAL TIPS:
- First get your kids to eat the lasagna with spinach & mixed greens.
- Next time you make lasagna, add mushrooms, black olives, red veggies.
- Use a lot of cheese, make it nice & gooey!
- Our toddler has been eating this lasagna since he was 1 yr old, its Yummy Yummy Baby!
- Have Fun with food & your kids will have fun eating it! 🙂
Stay tuned for fun juice & shake recipes that are totally kid friendly!
Stay Healthy & Happy ~ Dr. Dee
Very Inspiring Blogger Award
Thank you to Blissful Eating for nominating me for the Very Inspiring Blogger Award! Blissful Eating’s blog speaks right to my heart! Her passion for Healthy food & world travel is so easy for me to relate with and fun to visit! I love your posts… Thanks for the Healthy Inspiration! 🌱🌞🌱
I feel honored that another foodie and health conscious blogger finds inspiration in my posts! If one mommy and/or baby’s life is helped by these posts… It is all the inspiration I need 💜
Here are 7 Random Facts About me… Yummy Yummy Baby’s Blogger!
1. I started my blog to help other mommies who have kids with restricted diets, intolerances, are sick or disabled and need inspiration for Yummy Vegan Recipes & Remedies! 🌱👶🌱
2. My Inspiration are my 2 children, one who survived leukemia and the other who battled severe gut dysbiosis. 😇😇
3. I’m a Certified Holistic Nutritionist with an expertise in Children & Eating Disorders- My Passion is Children’s Holistic Nutrition! 🌱 🍎🌱
4. My favorite thing to do is have my immediate family, neices, nephews, brothers & sisters…😋 all in one room eating & laughing together (of course while teasing each other). 👪👫👧👦
5. My husband & I have traveled quite a bit, but our favorite place is Cozumel… It is magical for us! 💑💋
6. I became a Vegan while working at a Vegan restaurant that helped put me through College at UCLA. 🐻I learned I’m lactose intolerant & accidentally cured my long time stomach pain!✏📚
7. I love animals 💜 I almost became a therapist for animals instead of humans and sometimes wonder what would have been. 🐶🐱🐣🐒🐨🐼🐯
I would like to thank 15 Bloggers who make this world a better place! Your inspiration is changing lives! 🌏
Yummy Yummy Baby Nominations:
- A Holistic Journey: She makes me laugh and intrigues me everytime!
- Raising my Rainbow : She is helping raise awareness and is an inspiring mom.
- Girl Eats Greens: I Love her food and love her pics!
- Miss Delicious nutritious: I love her multicultural approach to blogging. She has a sweet soul and is beautiful inside and out!
- Tropics of Meta: An intelligent, well written, informative sociopolitical blogger!
- The Accidental Mathmetician: A powerful blogger that is so very interesting!
- Queer Girl Blogs: A courageous blog you will love!
- Dances with Fat: Raising awareness about body image and public perceptions about weight.
- Tenure, she wrote: Raising awareness about womens issues & challenges.
- Such Small Hands: Such a vulnerable blogger and her writing is exquisite.
- Fly Softly My Love: She writes about her true stories that come from her soul.
- Jenna Bednarsky: A writer after God’s own heart.
- Courtney Hammond: An interesting Feminist Literary Magazine.
- Punk Mum: Punk Mum is all about taking ownership of motherhood, rather than passively letting it define you and strip you of all the things you once liked about being alive.
- A Girl in a Hat: a blog that keeps you coming back for more!
My family and I thank you for this inspiring nomination… 💜 😊 💜.
Please read below for Rules of Participation if you would like to accept your Inspirational Nomination! Stay Healthy & Happy Dr. Dee ~
Rules for Participants:
- List the rules and display the award.
- Share seven facts about yourself.
- Nominate 15 other amazing blogs.
- Comment on a post to let them know that they are nominated.
- Proudly display the award logo on your blog.
- Follow or subscribe to the blogger who nominated you.
Raw Vegan Blackberry Cheesecake! Blackberry, The Super Fruit!
If there is one thing I truly miss about being Vegan… it is Cheese! For those who are lactose intolerant and/or Vegan, I am sure you can relate! It is not so much the cheese taste I miss, but more the creamy, cheesy texture and the food that accompanies cheese. Initially, I really missed items like Mac n Cheese, Jalapeño Poppers and CHEESECAKE!
After visiting the Gruyere Cheese Castle in Switzerland, I never thought I would completely give up Cheese, but here I am today, supporting my long term health and supporting animal rights. I have a great Vegan Mac n Cheese Recipe, I am working on the Jalapeño poppers, and here is a third version of my Cashew Cheesecake… Mmmm, Yummy Blackberry Cheesecake!
Again, I can honestly say that I love my Raw-Vegan Cheesecake more than regular cheesecake. One of the many great things about this dessert, is that it is really guilt free! Yay!
Why is this Cheesecake guilt free? Not only is it Raw-Vegan, it is lower in calories, low and the gylcemic index, and it is topped with Yummy Blackberry Super Fruit that has tremendous health benefits!
8 Nutritional Benefits of Blackberries:
- Very High in Antioxidants
- Very High in Tannins
- Very High in Vitamin C
- Very High in Dietary Fiber
- Very High in Anthocyanins
- Very High in Vitamin K
- Very High in Anti-Aging Properties
- Very High in ORAC (Oxygen Radiance Absorbing Capacity)
In a 2006 study published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, scientists concluded that the Antioxidants in Blackberries are far superior to the majority of other foods. Given all of Blackberries super components, scientists have concluded that regular consumption of Blackberries may provide incredible medical benefits.
8 Reasons Blackberries are a Super Fruit:
- Fights Cancer
- Protects Vision
- Protects Bones
- Prevents Diabetes
- Protects your Heart
- Improves Cognition
- Improves Digestion
- Protects Immune System
For at least 400 centuries, Blackberries have been used medicinally to fight infection, pleurisy and lung inflammation. People are rarely allergic to Blackberries, so chances are, you will get to enjoy their benefits too! Now that scientist have discovered Antioxidants, you can see why Blackberries are being used by Nutritionist and Dieticians all over the world. Blackberries are one of the yummiest disease fighting fruits that exist, truly one of nature’s biggest gifts! Here is my Yummy gift to you!
Recipe for Blackberry Cheesecake:
Sweet & Nutty Crust:
3/4 cup Dates (remove pits)
1 1/2 cups Mixed Nuts (Washed, Pre-soaked Walnuts, Almonds, Cashews)
I also added a drizzle of Raw Coconut Nectar (optional)
- Surround the inside of a round cake pan with wax paper.
- Process dates and nuts together until you get a rough, sticky mixture
- Using your hands, pat down mixture into the bottom of the cake/pie pan.
- Place it in your freezer while you prepare the cake.
Cashew Cheesecake:
3 cups Cashews (preferably soaked for 24 hrs)
1/4 Cup of Fresh Lemon Juice (more may be needed)
2/3 cup Coconut Nectar
3/4 cup Room Temp, Raw Coconut Oil
1 teaspoon of Sea Salt
Seeds from 1/2 Vanilla Pod
- Blend all ingredients together until smooth and creamy. It will taste… Deeelicious!
- Pour the Cashew Mix onto the frozen crust in the pan
- Set in the freezer until it has the hardness you want (3-5 hours or overnight).
Blackberry Topping:
1 1/2 Cups of Organic Blackberries
1/4 Large Organic Banana
1/2 Tablespoon of Raw Coconut Nectar
1 Tablespoon of Fresh Lemon Juice (use more if you want it thinner)
- Blend all the ingredients together until it is almost liquified… I use Nutribullet!
- Spread half the Blackberry Sauce on the Cheesecake,
- Carefully cover it, then put it back in the freezer.
- After it is frozen, take it out of the cake pan by holding onto the wax paper, then tugging.
- Drizzle the remaining sauce over each slice and enjoy, it is Yummy Yummy Baby!
Stay Healthy & Happy, Dr. Dee 🙂
Wasabi’s 8 Healing Benefits! 🌱 Vegan Sushi Balls
Wasabi… What is it?!? You know that green mushy guacamole like stuff you have probably seen in Japanese Restaurants. Only thing is, it tastes nothing like Guacamole!
I moved from a small town in Texas to California when I was 17 years old, I had never been to a Japanese restaurant, let alone heard of Wasabi. When I was served wasabi and ginger for the first time, this small town girl assumed it was Guacamole and put the entire wasabi ball in her mouth, yes, me… I did that!
I literally thought I was going to die! I couldn’t breath, I couldn’t think, I couldn’t speak, I was in so much pain… all the while, a restaurant full of people were all really really laughing at me and I still had no idea what was happening! It was a great way to learn not to assume anything about anything- especially food!
So seriously… what is Wasabi?!? Does it really have healing properties?
Wasabi is a perennial herb plant and is a member of the Cruciferae or Brassicaceae family along with cabbages, horseradish, and mustard. The root of the Wasabi is often used as a condiment and has a very strong taste and aroma. The two types of Wasabi include Wasabi Daruma and Wasabi Mazuma. Wasabi has decent amounts of Dietary Fiber, Vitamin B6, Vitamin C, Calcium, Potassium and Magnesium.
Although Wasabi is often known as a condiment in Japanese restaurants, there are some other great reasons to eat Wasabi. Now, when I say Wasabi is healthy, I don’t mean the processed kind you find in most restaurants, snacks, junk food, I mean the actual fresh Wasabi Plant (Wasabia japonica or Eutrema japonica).
The Wasabi most people have eaten may have gluten, is a mix of horse radish, a little mustard paste and green food coloring. Real plant Wasabi tastes like an herb, is pungent, but doesn’t sting like the horse radish. It is easier to eat and is actually a very powerful healing agent. Genuine fresh Wasabi is rarely found in the United States or Canada.
8 Top Healing Benefits of Wasabi:
- Anti-microbial: Fights many forms of bacteria, yeast and mold. [8}
- Anti-bacterial: Found effective in fighting E. Coli, Staphylococcus & H-Pylori. [6]
- Detoxifier: helps the liver to get rid of toxins & carcinogens. [7]
- Anti-inflammatory: may reduce arthritis, joint pain, asthma & Irritable Bowel Disease.
- Anti-Cancer Properties: may assist the liver in neutralizing toxins & cancer cells. [3] [4]
- Protects Heart: may reduce heart attack/stroke by preventing blood clots. [Dr. James Duke]
- Improves Digestion: may help the intestinal tract get rid of toxins & is rich in fibers. [1] [6]
- Fights Cavities: The leaves help kill Streptococcus Bacteria in your mouth. [Matsuda, 2004]
My favorite healing property about Wasabi is its possible effectiveness at fighting H-Pylori. According to a 2004 PubMed article by Shin, Masuda and Naohide, the AIT and other components in wasabi roots, stems and leaves were able to show bactericidal activities against H-pylori strain NCTC 11637, YS 27 and YS 50. If Wasabi can fight H-Pylori, imagine how powerful it is?!?
All these studies were conducted in a laboratory, as are the majority of studies, but Wasabi has been used as a medicinal herb for thousands of years, and there are many people who attest to its healing properties.
Real Wasabi is very expensive to buy and find because it is very rare to find fresh Wasabi, and it can also be difficult to grow Wasabi. Wasabi is naturally found in the mountainous wet riverbed climate of Japan and does not need a ton of sunshine, but nonetheless is a stubborn plant to grow and takes about two to three years to be ready for harvesting.
If you want to grow Wasabi, you most likely will need a water tower or aquatic system. The state of North Carolina, Oregon, the province of British Columbia, and the Countries of New Zealand, Taiwan and Korea have been the only other places besides Japan to really take on the difficulty of successfully growing large quantities of Wasabi.
If you are looking for ammunition in your natural healing arsenal, Wasabi is a standup Super Plant! If you can get your hands on some fresh Wasabi, please send me some… half kidding! 🙂
You can make fresh Wasabi by cutting the root, peeling the skin off and finely grating the green flesh to get a creamy like texture.
These Vegan Sushi Balls and Wasabi Dipping Sauce are so Yummy Yummy, you won’t eat just one, so here is a recipe for 17!
Ingredients for Vegan/Gluten Free Sushi Balls:
- 2 Cups of White Rice (short grain works best). I use GF Jasmine Rice.
- 3 Tablespoons of of Rice Vinegar
- 4 Tablespoons of Coconut Liquid Aminos (or Braggs or Soy Sauce)
- 2 Tablespoons of Sugar (I use Coconut Sugar)
- 1 1/2 teaspoons of Sea Salt
- 1/4 Cup Chopped Sea Vegetables
- 2 carrots (chopped)
- 5 Scallions (chopped Green part)
- 1/4 cup hulled Black or White Sesame Seeds (I mix both)
- 1 Garlic Clove
- 1 Inch of Fresh Ginger (peeled & sliced)
Instructions for Sushi Balls:
- Cook 2 Cups of Rice according to package instructions
- While Rice is cooking, Combine the Liquid Aminos (Soy Sauce), Rice Vinegar, Sugar, Sea Salt, Carrots, Scallions, Garlic, Ginger in a Food Processor/Blender until well minced.
- Transfer the mixture to a large Glass Bowl or a bowl that is not plastic.
- Place the Sesame seeds on a large flat plate and spread them out.
- When the Rice is done, combine Rice & Mixture and fold it all in with a wooden spoon.
- I tightly cover my Rice Mixture and let it sit for at least 2 hours.
- After the rice is cool & sticky, make little rice balls & roll each one in the sesame seeds.
- Put them on a baking sheet with was paper and refrigerate them for up to 2 days!
Wasabi Dipping Sauce Ingredients:
- 1 Tablespoon of Wasabi Powder (unless you can get fresh)
- 1/4 Cup of Spring Water
- 1 Large Garlic Clove
- 1 inch Fresh Ginger, peeled & thinly sliced
- 2 Tablespoons of Coconut Oil (room temp)
- 1 teaspoon of Coconut Sugar (or sugar of choice)
- 5 Tablespoons of Coconut Aminos (or Braggs Aminos, or Soy Sauce)
- 1 Tablespoons of Rice Vinegar
Instructions for Wasabi Dipping Sauce
Save a couple of strips of the Ginger on the side. Place the rest of the above ingredients in a food processor or blender and pulse until all the ingredients are very fine. Taste to see if you like to add more soy sauce/aminos or Wasabi… I always do 😉 put the Wasabi Sauce in a little dish and sprinkle some little Ginger slices on top!
Mmmm Yummy Yummy Baby! Stay healthy & happy, Dr. Dee 😉

[1] Suppressive effect of wasabi (pungent Japanese spice) on gastric carcinogenesis induced by MNNG in rats. Nutr Cancer. 1991;16(1):53-8.
[2] Dynamics of Nrf2 and Keap1 in ARE-mediated NQO1 expression by wasabi 6-(methylsulfinyl)hexyl isothiocyanate. J Agric Food Chem. 2011 Nov 23;59(22):11975-82.
[3] Selective sensitivity to wasabi-derived 6-(methylsulfinyl)hexyl isothiocyanate of human breast cancer and melanoma cell lines studied in vitro. Cancer Detect Prev. 2005;29(2):155-60.
[4] Tumor cell proliferation and cyclooxygenase inhibitory constituents in horseradish (Armoracia rusticana) and Wasabi (Wasabia japonica). J Agric Food Chem. 2005 Mar 9;53(5):1440-4.
[5] Colon cancer proliferating desulfosinigrin in wasabi (Wasabia japonica). Nutr Cancer. 2004;48(2):207-13.
[6] Bactericidal activity of wasabi (Wasabia japonica) against Helicobacter pylori. Int J Food Microbiol. 2004 Aug 1;94(3):255-61.[7] Anti-influenza virus activity of extract of Japanese wasabi leaves discarded in summer. J Sci Food Agric. 2008;88:1704–1708.
[8] Suppressive effect of hot water extract of wasabi (Wasabia japonica Matsum.) leaves on the differentiation of 3T3-L1 preadipocytes. Food Chem. 2010;118:239–244.
























