Food Network Magazine - (09)September 2020

(Comicgek) #1
Kids are eating
better these days.
Based on the American
Heart Association’s overall
diet scores, children’s
diets have improved by
27 percent since 1999.
Kids today are consuming
fewer sugary drinks and
more whole grains, fruits
and vegetables.
SOURCE: JAMA

A 7-year-old is


blowing up on Instagram.


Leo Kelly has racked up nearly
270,000 followers since last summer—
just for reviewing Shirley Temples.
“My taste buds basically tell me what to
say,” explains the second-grader, who’s
known to dock points for versions that
are too sweet, too watery or—the worst
offense—cherry-less. Restaurants take
him seriously: After a disappointing
review from Leo, LongHorn Steakhouse
unveiled a new Shirley Temple and a
strict five-cherry policy.


daughters wrote a cookbook!
Chef skills run in the Zakarian family:
13-year-old Madeline and 11-year-old
Anna often cook with their dad at home
and on TV, and now you can buy their first
cookbook, The Family That Cooks Together.
We asked the authors, and their dad, what
it’s really like to cook with one another.

Follow this young critic
on Instagram
@theshirleytempleking.

Make a perfect Shirley Temple:
Fill a glass with ice and
add lemon-lime soda or
ginger ale. Add a splash of
grenadine and stir. Garnish
with a maraschino cherry.

Anna

Madeline.
She doesn’t
clean as
she goes.

Dad—he’s
the best
at it.

Madeline
doesn’t hold
back. She’s
honest and
accurate.

Me!

Madeline

I don’t think
I’m messy,
but they
both pointed
to me.

Dad’s the
first to
volunteer.

I try to
never put a
bad dish in
my mouth.

Me.
I’m always
up for a
sweet treat.

Who’s the
messiest
in the
kitchen?

Who’s the
most likely
to volunteer
for dish
duty?

Who’s the
harshest
food
critic?

Who has
the biggest
sweet
tooth?

Geoffrey

Madeline,
but it’s the
opposite
of her
personality!

It’s not my
favorite, but
I can’t stand
a mess.

All of us. We
make, we taste
and we talk
about how to
make it better.

Me—
don’t tell!

These plates are
out of this world!
When Robin Oloyede’s son said he
wanted to become an astronaut,
she searched everywhere for
products featuring astronauts
who looked like him—and found
none. So she started her own
tableware company, Colorfull
Plates, and now she has designs
for budding paleontologists,
roboticists, pilots and more. “Kids
can see themselves at every meal
as they do in their dreams,” she
says. colorfullplates.com

FOR
KIDS

122 FOOD NETWORK MAGAZINE ●SEPTEMBER 2020


SHIRLEY TEMPLE: ALAMY. KID’S LUNCH: GETTY IMAGES.

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COO/($ (O(j[fi/ER
8!1 from bltaNI'I Ovr hbl~ f•m• v to AKo~' Yours

MADELINE & ANNA ZAKARIAN
d•ught•n o f Geoffrey Zakarian

Geoffrey Zakarian's


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