When prompted to describe his favorite food, Jennifer Fitzgerald's 8-year-old son paused thoughtfully before delivering an answer.
"Quiche," said Keenan, of Concord, Calif., before elaborating. "Broccoli quiche."
At pizza joints, he and his 9-year-old sister Samantha will often opt for the salad bar over a slice. Recently, a friend offered her kids a Pop-Tart. They didn't know what one was.
The Fitzgerald kids' affinity for greens and other foods often thought of as anathema to children isn't some small miracle bestowed upon Fitzgerald and her husband, John. Both children were at one time picky eaters, shunning many of the healthy foods that are staples at the family dinner table.
But their parents didn't give in. Picky eating was never rewarded. The rule was to eat what's for dinner, or have a bowl of granola with milk — in other words, no trading up broccoli for mac and cheese.
Much research has backed up what the Fitzgeralds have learned in practice: Grown-ups and kids eat the same foods, sit-down family meals are standard and picky eating simply isn't tolerated. Parents need not resort to trickery to get their kids to eat their veggies.
"Research shows that you have to offer a child a food an average 10 to 12 times before they like it," said Dr. Scott Gee, a pediatrician specializing in obesity at Kaiser Permanente's Walnut Creek (Calif.) Medical Center. "I think a lot of parents give up."
The Fitzgeralds did not.