*Hi again, what I have done with my very picky son is, I make smoothies... or, he LOVES home-made soups... in which I MINCE up everything REALLY small... and I find he WILL eat it no matter what I put in it. THEN I give him a straw to "eat" his soup and he finds it a lot "funner" to eat. THEN, I find that my son tends to eat more and better, if we eat outside on the patio, for some reason. AND, I have to portion things out on his plate in very small "portions" or globs on his plate... if too much is there or too many things on his plate... he won't eat. He finds it overwhelming. OR, my son will tend to eat more and be more adventurous IF I make shish-kebob type things... or stick anything on a skewer, along with a sauce for dipping.
-then again, curiosity about trying 'new' foods or anything 'new', to me, is a personality thing. My daughter is a lot more adventurous about foods, but my son is not. He will stick his tongue out (like it is an antennae, and then just taste the food with the very tip... and then he makes a face and will REFUSE to even put it in his mouth, or he will poke the food around on his plate and that's it). But even if he refuses something, I don't flinch and I do feed him other things. I've noticed that as he has gotten 'older' his tastes are changing... and evolving and he is eating more things.... though not as various as his sister. Which is no big deal... because he is very healthy and growing/developing fine.
She seems to eat fine to me.
I would NOT make her eat new/different things. Just hang back about it. BECAUSE... if forced, a child will get to HATE meal times. And to me, that is the worse.
In time she will eat other things.
You do not have to slave in the kitchen to make her gourmet meals. ANd she already eats fine, and varied.
The thing is, all kids go through food phases. Its normal and can't be avoided. BUT, if it is handled with stern forcing and punishment and emotional anguish... then it will NOT solve it. AND then the child will get food hang-ups and hate eating with the family, or you. Because there will be a constant negative association.
When I was a child, my Mom would cook liver. HER food that she liked. NOT me. I HATED IT PASSIONATELY. As most kids do. BUT then, if I did not eat, I got punished. It is not fair. Why should i have to eat liver? My Mom likes it, not me. A child should NOT HAVE TO like what their Parents like, and visa versa. I got to resent some dinners/meal times, because I felt like my Mom was cooking things just so I could get punished, and knowing that I would not like it. So why play games with food? Why force it? It is not fair. Even as an adult now... I remember this childhood meal-time "war" and it colors a little of my attitude that I had toward my Mom as a child. And it was not warm and fuzzy thoughts.
Food and eating, should NOT be a "battle."
I don't know why, we feel we have to make kids eat what they are telling us they don't like. IN ADULTS...there are some real picky eaters too. Do we force them to eat? No.
But eating evolves. It changes throughout life. So, at this point in time... for a baby/toddler this age... their "taste buds" are not even FULLY developed yet. Thus, their likes/dislikes. So, they taste things differently than us and have preferences. Its okay. No biggie.
When you do offer things, don't make a big deal of it or push it. Make meal time fun... and non-intimidating and without stress. Would you want her to understand what meal-time is... or that it is like being in punishment? ie: mealtime should be about eating with family, talking, having fun, catching up with the day, being with your parents etc. NOT about "how many pieces of food did you eat?" or a quota of what food a child did/or did not eat.
Mostly, a child should learn that food is food and fun, and that when they are full, its okay. That food is NOT about "control." Otherwise, when they get older, they will think that food is a way to "control" their weight, & their lives, & they will eat for emotional reasons, and not for normal reasons.
I think your daughter is perfectly fine. She, at that age, eats WAY MORE than my son, who is pickier than your daughter. So, be happy about her intake. She seems normal.
I have found, that the more I 'force' foods on my picky son, or ANY child for that matter, the MORE THEY WILL NOT EAT. Period. You cannot make a child eat. But, you can expose them to other foods. Over Time. But, exposing them to foods does not mean they HAVE TO eat it.
Keep in mind as well, that a "serving size" for a child, is in terms of teaspoons or tablespoons. That's it. Not "adult" portions. IN fact, if there is TOO much on a child's plate, many times they will not touch it, because it is simply too overwhelming and TOO much. A child will eat until they are full... not until the ENTIRE plate is eaten up.
Jerry Seinfeld's wife has a book, about how to get kids to eat all sorts of things, by pureeing it into the foods. Its a good cookbook. Try it.
All the best,
Susan