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Oh, how I wish Michele Howard had her cooking school back when my kids were growing up. Michele, a registered dietitian, started Measuring Up! Cooking for Kids about 10 years ago. She holds cooking classes for kids aged 3-17 in Scarborough.

Kids cooking class with Michele Howard
L-R Bailey, Michele, and Ramona
Courtesy Jen Boggs

Cousins Ramona and Bailey were in a recent class and by the looks of the pictures Ramona’s mom, Jen took, I think they had a terrific time.

“I want to try to get kids to eat different foods and incorporate healthiness,” Michele told me. “When they cook it, sometimes it makes them want to try it because they were involved in it.”

She encourages parents to invite their kids into the kitchen. That may sound a bit overwhelming to some parents, but she has some helpful hints.

  • Start small, even if it’s just letting the kids stir the vegetables.
  • Start with easy recipes.
  • Get everything prepped ahead and let them help stir and put things together.
  • When I chop herbs, I use scissors. Even kid’s scissors work good for that, so you can have them do that and you don’t have to worry about a knife.
  • Three-year-olds can sit and watch you and play with the ingredients.
  • Five-year-olds can get in there and start mixing. Maybe not all of it, but they can help with mixing or collect ingredients for you.
  • Take them to the grocery store and let them pick out something they might want to cook.
  • Take them to the grocery store or farmers market just to see the food and learn where it comes from.
  • Look up recipes together. In a cookbook or on the computer nowadays. It gets them involved.
Two little girls in cooking school
L-R Michele, Ramona, Bailey
Courtesy Jen Boggs

When she’s teaching a recipe, Michele has her students make it from scratch. “From step one,” she says. “They have to measure, they have to chop. they have to do everything.”

The kids seem to enjoy handling food more than anything. They like rolling out the dough and putting yummy fillings inside. Sweet things are always a favorite, but Michele also teaches them to make pocket hand pies with a hamburger filling or chicken pot pies. “If you make a chicken pot pie,” she advises, “make individual little chicken pot pies so they can roll out the dough and make their own little pie. A lot of times turning everything into individual or mini is better with kids because then they see the little creation they made instead of a big huge dish in front of them.”

And she encourages them to eat what they make. Sometimes, it can be a challenge. Like when they made tofu tacos. “None of them would eat it because they saw the tofu,” she said. “Once they tasted it, they said it tasted just like hamburger. But sometimes it’s risky doing a strange ingredient in front of them because then they won’t taste it.”

I don’t think Bailey and Ramona had any trouble tasting the goodies they made!

Kids in Cooking School
Hats off to the chefs Bailey and Ramona
Courtesy Jen Boggs

If you’d like to learn more about the classes Michele offers, check out her website Measuring Up: Cooking for Kids

And because it’s the holidays, Michele is sharing a recipe for something sweet you can make with your kids.

Mini Chocolate Ganache Tarts

mini chocolate tarts
KRiemer / Pixabay

4 Servings

Ingredients

Tart dough

  • 10 TBS butter
  • 1/2 cup plus 2 TBS confectioners Sugar
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 1/2 cups flour
  • 6 TBS Cocoa

Filling

  • 6 ounces semisweet chocolate
  • 2 TBS butter
  • 1 TBS corn syrup
  • 1 TBS granulated sugar
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream

Instructions

Tart Dough

  1. In a food processor, blend the butter and confectioners sugar.
  2. Add yolks and vanilla. Blend well.
  3. Mix flour and cocoa powder together and add. Blend until well combined.
  4. Remove from food processor and wrap in plastic. Freeze for 15 minutes.
  5. Preheat oven to 400°.
  6. Divide dough into 24 pieces and press each piece into each cup of mini cupcake pans. Press into the bottom and up the sides.
  7. Bake for 5 minutes. Remove from oven and allow to cool.

Filling

  1. Place chocolate in a small bowl.
  2. In a microwave-safe bowl, microwave butter, corn syrup, sugar and cream until bubbling.
  3. Pour the warm cream over the chocolate and let sit for 2 minutes. Whisk until smooth.
  4. Pour into cooled chocolate tarts.
  5. Put into refrigerator to set.
  6. Before serving, decorate with whipped cream and strawberry or raspberry.

 Enjoy!