🎉 Make mealtime a winning adventure!
The Genuine Fred DINNER WINNER is an award-winning kid's game plate tray designed to make mealtime fun and engaging for picky eaters. With 8 divided sections and a covered dessert area, it encourages healthy eating habits while being safe and dishwasher-friendly. Featuring vibrant illustrations, it's the perfect gift for children and has received accolades from parenting organizations.
L**N
Game changer
My 3 year old would not eat anything good other than milk, bacon, raisin bread and the occasional chicken strip, only wanted cookies/chocolate/candy. I am a professional chef and make tons of good food for him to try, I know he would like it if only he would try it but could never convince him to taste anything, not even pizza/mac & cheese/mashed potato, nothing.I put tiny portions of various foods on this plate, making sure there was at least one thing I knew he would eat, and then put a candy in the treasure chest spot. The first attempt he ate 3 new foods and since then he tries at least a bite of whatever I put in the tray because to him it’s a game that he likes to play. We have only been using this for a few days and he’s already tried a dozen new items and to his surprise he likes them. These plates are a great icebreaker to get kids past stubbornly refusing everything you try to feed them, best purchase in a long time!
A**
Ahh-mazing
Picky eater? Buy this. You know you've already tried everything else.Here's my picky eater story: he ate everything when he was little. Whatever I ate, he ate. Avocado, pork chops, risotto, even unagi (this is still his favorite food if you ask him), and then around 3-4 I started letting him order from the kids menu and I broke him. I broke my wonderful eater, and I was tossed headlong into a world of chicken nuggets and kraft mac and cheese. If I could undo anything, it would be that cursed kids menu. It got so bad that at one point he would only eat KRAFT macaroni or MCDONALD'S chicken nuggets. Absolutely ridiculous. He wouldn't even try different candy - he literally only ate the Hershey chocolates from his Halloween candy. Dad and I got all the other goodies. I took him to the doctor, and even to PT to determine if it was a sensory disorder or something.I thought it would get better at school. Surely peer pressure and being stuck there all day he'd be so hungry he'd eat what they gave him. Nope. He'd eat the milk at whatever tiny side he didn't mind. The doctor told me not to stick his likes and to make him eat what the family eats. Nope, he'd just go to bed hungry. Then on to school and be hungry. My kid would rather starve. We tried games, bribes, punishment, even force (have you ever seen a kid spit out hot fudge or honey?) So yeah, I'd give up. Occasionally I would absolutely force the issue and make him eat something, (like a fried chicken leg or something - something I knew he liked but it looked different). And here were are now and he's 7.5 and he still refuses to try new things.I refuse to let him be one of those 40 year old men who only eat chicken nuggets.He will psyche himself out and assume he won't like something and then wash it down with milk. He does this with foods that he probably actually would like if he gave it an honest and fair try. I've been just outright forcing him to eat things now. It's just a battle of wills to break him before this becomes a lifelong problem for him.Somehow I stumbled across this and bought it because "what the hell". I thought he was too old to be enticed by this and wished I had found it sooner.To my surprise he was ALL ABOUT HIS TREASURE MAP. He's had 4 meals so far and REQUESTS the map. He's excited about what his prize will be, and even excited about what his foods will be. Granted, he's not thrilled about all of them, but he eats them. They're small portions and he can wrap his head around it. My kid are 2 pieces of broccoli without argument tonight. I didn't have to spend 30 minutes talking him into it. He's rated several new foods and I'm excited to go shopping to find new things to put on his tray. He knows there will always be easy spaces with food he does like, and that makes him feel safe. He's got 2 or 3 "dangerous" spots for new foods.Is he falling in love with his new tastes? Not yet. But he's understanding that food doesn't have to be your favorite to eat it (no one really gets excited about veggies - but we eat them, and we find ways to make them yummy). Will he start to like the new things he's being exposed to? I sure hope so. I hope it's at least taking the fear our of it and making tasting new things ok. Will he stay interested in the plate? He'll probably not be as excited forever, but we're definitely going to use it to get him in track with being a healthy eater.Buy this!
B**N
Nice
Es muy lindo y a mi hijo le encanta y lo motiva a probar cosas que no come para llegar a la meta y obtener una deliciosa recompensa
S**L
Amazing for Picky Eaters!
My almost 5 year old refuses to eat dinner she’s a great eater but there is something about dinner she won’t even taste it could be her favorite meal and she won’t do it. First night with this plate she ate every bite!! Told her she had to free the princess in the castle to get her treat by eating her way through the enchanted forest game.
N**T
Helped my super picky eater!
Huge help for my super picky eater. I will probably go into more detail than I need to, but for parents at a loss, my child just had FOUR plates of food from this plate.For quality: it’s great, heavy plastic. I don’t expect it to fade or chip at all. The finish square has a cover which is great for hiding the surprise at the end to keep kids excited to eat or at least more open to eat. I do wish the finish square was just slightly bigger, but that’s only because I’m putting hot wheels cars under it. It would be great for a small piece of chocolate or fruit, not much bigger than that.Now my story with this plate:I have a 3 year old who is one of the pickiest eaters. Trying new foods would result in refusal, meltdowns and tears. I’ve tried it all, offering foods over and over, getting them involved in making, bribery, etc and while I might get a couple bites here or there on the rare occasion, nothing really worked. Tonight I made one safe food (mashed potatoes) meatballs and carrots. I started with every other square mashed potatoes and each square 1 to 2 bites with a hot wheels car wrapped in a paper towel hidden underneath the finish. My toddler was hesitant and first, but with repeated reminders it was only one bite and then back to mashed potatoes, he finally tried a bite! From there, the next plate I upped it, now it was 2-3 bites and then back to mashed potatoes. By the 4th plate we were up to 4 bites per square! He easily had 8 carrot slices, a full meatball and probably 3/4 of a cup of mashed potatoes total! Previous attempts with a “normal” plate of this exact meal were very, very lucky if he took 1 or 2 bites total if any at all. Making it into a game and smaller bites helped us tremendously!! I’m absolutely shocked and so happy we took a chance on it!!
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1 month ago
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