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My Fruit Adventures - (Growing Adventurous Eaters) by Arielle Dani Lebovitz (Paperback)

My Fruit Adventures - (Growing Adventurous Eaters) by  Arielle Dani Lebovitz (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 12.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Do you have a favorite food? "My Fruit Adventures," a colorful, guided journal based on the book "Where Do Bananas Come From? A Book of Fruits" is designed to help you discover yours! Let your fruit exploration begin with worksheets that spark self-discovery, creative activities, and fun facts.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><strong>Do you have a favorite food? </strong><em>My Fruit Adventures</em>, a colorful, guided journal based on the book <em>Where Do Bananas Come From? A Book of Fruits</em> is designed to help you discover yours!</p><p>Let your fruit exploration begin with worksheets that spark self-discovery, creative activities, and fun facts. Grow your interest in food through hands-on learning and taste-test experiments that use your five senses. Plus, there is a 100-word glossary to help you describe what you eat.</p><p>This journal invites you to explore fruit by writing down your thoughts, drawing about your experiences, creating recipes, and answering questions such as, "How do you choose what new fruit you will try?"</p><p>The perfect tool for a budding foodie or picky eater, this journal guides your senses and encourages observation, curiosity, and creativity. Learn about what you like to eat in a way that is fun and pressure-free. You get to be in charge!</p><p>Now, put your Food Explorer hat on and get ready to experience delicious!</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p><em>"My Vegetable Adventures </em>and <em>My Fruit Adventures</em> are a positive and fun approach to sensory evaluation of foods previously unknown to your child's palate. Getting all of the senses involved in a hands-on approach can take what could be a difficult experience (getting your kids to eat vegetables) to an eye-opening discovery of new found favorites. I found the descriptive word chart to be an outstanding way to allow kids to share multi-dimensional impressions of vegetables they may not be familiar with and perhaps even a little apprehensive to try. At a time where it's so easy for children to develop negative relationships with foods, this workbook allows for exploration in a safe space where it's ok to not like every food you try. Despite that, your kids will still have a fun experience learning about how something tastes, smells, or feels. And the grown-ups might learn a little something too!"</p><p>--<strong>Melinda Boyd</strong>, DCN, MPH, MHR, RD, FAND, Maternal and Child Nutrition Expert</p><br>

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