It’s time to get cooking but wait..you need a few (dozen) ingredients to make your masterpiece. And you’ve got to bring the kids. How to keep them busy at the grocery store when trips are frequent and carts loaded? We’re hoping these tips and tricks will work like a charm. Scroll down before your next shopping trip! 

Jomjakkapat Parrueng/Unsplash

1. Speed through your list with a supermarket race. 

Take your list and divide it up among the family members. If it’s just you and the kid(s)—and you think it’s safe— give them ten items on the list to find on their own and time them. If you’ve got enough to form teams, do it! Each team has the same amount or near amount of items and races to get them all and get to the check out line first. Parse the list on purpose so items are near each other and you just saved yourself at least 20 minutes, mama. Score! Even if your child is really young, give them an item or two to grab in the same aisle you are in. 

2. Play find and seek as you shop. 

Before you head to the store, create a checklist of things kids can easily spot in the grocery store—and a few tricky items—and hand it to the kids once you arrive. Include produce, people, and even scenarios. You can also adapt this DIY farmer’s market bingo set to your grocery store or this checklist of pantry essentials you’re likely to spot in the store.

Canva

3. Let the kids hatch a meal plan and then shop the ingredients. 

Let them pick a recipe and then draw or write up a list of the ingredients they will need. They can shop and later help prep, so double bonus! 

4. Tell them to wear a costume. 

Nobody says you need to wear sensible clothes to the grocery store! Bust out a cape, a crown, a ballgown or last year’s Halloween ensemble. Give them “control” over the situation want. n by allowing them to dress in whatever wild outfit they want.

photo: TheVirtualDenise via pixabay

5. Create a pretend play scenario! 

Prep for your mission at home (see above, re: costume) and lay out the plot on the way to the store. You are spies seeking the missing can of beans that no one knows was gone. Or you are master chefs preparing a meal for the Queen. Or maybe you just landed on Earth from another planet and are amazed at this magical place full of foodstuffs. 

6. Allow them to be part of the decision making by letting them pick out special items.

In addition to letting the kids cross goods off the list, allow them to pick out a few special things. They can be for school lunches, or for someone they love—i.e. Grandpa’s fave cookies, a treat for their best friend, a new dishtowel just for the kids to use. It doesn’t need to be sweet (but hey, we’re not above bribery) or expensive, and it could be something you need anyway. “We’re going to get this jam for your cousins when they visit!” might just be the well-timed, enthusiastic sway you need to avoid a meltdown.

7. Do a dry run. 

No, we are not suggesting you go Thanksgiving shopping and not buy anything. Try a dry run at the store here and there, when you are just grabbing one item or you don’t really need something that badly. When you are there, point out exciting things at the store like the beautiful produce or the yummy samples. Then, the next time you need to go you can invoke the power of memory, “We’re going to the store with the free cookie! Yay!”

 

Sweet and surprisingly good — just the kind of classes you want for your kids, right? Cooking classes not only satisfy the hunger burning in your little ones’ tummies but also their desire to make something of their own. We especially love getting kids in the kitchen as the holidays approach. Here are some fun places for kids and families to get hands-on experience learning how to cook and bake

Photo courtesy of Turnip the Heat

Turnip the Heat
Turnip the Heat has a cooking class for just about anyone who can mix up some batter. Preschool “cooking and tasting” classes for ages 3-5 are meant to introduce young minds and taste buds to new ideas and flavors ($10). Family classes like the upcoming Festive Fall Foods ($38) allow kids 8 and up to participate on their own or for parents to tag along. All classes end with an opportunity for the young chefs to sit down and enjoy the feast together.

Locations vary
503-317-2287
Online: turniptheheatcooking.com

Sur La Table
This kitchen company’s bread-and-butter is classes for adults, but kids can get on the action too. In fact, “Spooktacular” Halloween classes for kids Ages 8-14 are coming up. The whole family (ages 6 and up with participating adult) can get in on a Family Fun: Sweet Holiday Gifts class that makes chocolate peppermint bark, homemade marshmallows and cinnamon-coated graham crackers. Sounds like sticky good fun. Winter break also brings a 5-day cooking class for kids 8-12, with a tour through Mexico, Italy, Asia, America and a final day all about chocolate.

1102 NW Couch St.
Portland, Or
503-295-9685
Online: surlatable.com

Photo courtesy of The Merry Kitchen

The Merry Kitchen
Plenty of holiday fun is had in Julie Merry’s Merry Kitchen. Fall brings baking with apples and a full Thanksgiving dinner family class, and December brings gingerbread house making and edible gift making. Families can expect lots of fun themed classes designed to engage even the most hesitant chefs. The Star Wars and Harry Potter classes are sure to be a hit and might even turn your culinary skeptic into a fan of cooking. Register early, because classes do sell out. Note: family classes are held at a different location for more space. Classes are available for ages 3 and up.

5202 NE 72nd Ave.
Portland, Or
503-946-8357
Online: themerrykitchen.com

Portland’s Culinary Workshop
If your kid is serious about learning to cook (or serious about having fun and eating), send them to Portland’s Culinary Workshop. Classes for kids 8-12 and 6-12 include the principles of cooking, pasta from scratch, Thai food, vegetarian and vegan food and   cookies and pies. Most classes last 2 hours and cost $45.

807 N Russell St.
Portland, Or
503-512-0447
Online: portlandsculinaryworkshop.com

Blake’s Decorette Shop
The Decorette Shop is all about beautiful and bountiful sweets, so it’s no surprise that their classes are the same. Upcoming kids’ classes include volcano cake, Halloween candy making, cookie decorating and cupcake decorating. Be forewarned: you might have a hard time leaving the store without buying some cookie cutters or specialty sprinkles.

11945 SW Pacific Hwy
Portland, Or
503-620-5100
Online: decoretteshop.com

Photo courtesy of Nourish Northwest

Nourish Northwest
Need a palette cleanser after all that holiday indulgence? Nourish Northwest transforms whole foods and local and seasonal ingredients (yay veggies!) into healthy choices your kids will love to eat. Take one class ($30) or a four-class series ($100) in the Cooking Around the World series. Ages 7-12 are recommended and dietary restrictions can be accommodated with advance notice. Note for gluten-free families: The Everything Pumpkin series is gluten-free.

4418 SE Hawthorne Blvd.
Portland, Or
503-234-7280
Online: nourishnorthwest.com

Have your kids had a blast learning to cook at a local class? Let us know in the comments!

—Kelley Gardiner

Dreaming of a Cheap Christmas?

As soon as you threw away (or consumed?) the last of Junior’s Halloween candy, your thoughts turned to the coming holidays. Gotta remember to order the Thanksgiving turkey. And, wow, is it really time to start thinking about holiday shopping?

It is…especially because the 2nd annual CoolMom Toy Swap is coming right up – Nov. 14 in West Seattle– and it’s a great place to find gently-used toys at bargain prices. The sale is geared to getting folks to do a “toy shuffle,” by trading toys they don’t use for new “used” items.

So before you take advantage of the sale, you can also use it as a de-cluttering opportunity. CoolMom is still looking for donated toys— a great reason to get rid of the stack of toys, clothes or babygear your littlie has outgrown.

People who donate get $5 to use towards purchase at the sale, plus the satisfaction of knowing they are helping both the environment (by recycling toys) as well as those in need.  Cool Mom organizer Kristy Royce says last year’s sale was super successful in that it enabled people who were going through tough financial times to buy holiday gifts. As one happy mom said, “Christmas was not going to happen due to layoffs, but the sale saved our holiday.”

Go here for details on how and where to donate.  Deadline to donate is Nov. 12. All proceeds from the Toy Swap benefit CoolMom, Westside Baby and Family Works.

PS – Why stop at a toy exchange? Why not swap home accessories and spruce up your place for the Holidays? On Nov 21, Sit + Sip and Nest Home are hosting a Holiday Home Accessories Swap and everything swapped is free. Start clearing out those unopened wedding gifts…

—Kavita Varma-White