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Mark Bittman turns his attention to the small chefs in your household with a cookbook for kids

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 Mark Bittman has taught us how to cook everything 鈥 how to bake and grill, prepare fish and vegetarian meals and do it fast. This fall, he's targeting a different kind of home chef 鈥 the little ones.
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This cover image released by HarperCollins shows "How to Cook Everything Kids" by Mark Bittman. (HarperCollins via AP)

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 has taught us how to cook everything 鈥 how to bake and grill, prepare fish and vegetarian meals and do it fast. This fall, he's targeting a different kind of home chef 鈥 the little ones.

is written for children aged 8-12 and is bursting with photos, graphics, advice and techniques to empower any mini-Julia Childs in your home.

鈥淚t required a different kind of thinking,鈥 Bittman says. 鈥淭his is a book that is built to please kids and we鈥檙e not kids. So we had to consult with kids. We had to try to think like kids and about kids.鈥

Bittman, who has evolved from recipe developer and culinary writer into one of the leading voices on food and health policies, offers his take on like baked ziti, chicken nuggets and chicken with orange sauce, giving easy directions and variations, like pork chops with apples for the latter dish.

The tone is less pedantic and more encouraging, allowing room for younger chefs to experiment and customize dishes. There are lists 鈥 like 鈥9 Ways to Flavor Scrambled Eggs鈥 鈥 and recipes for substituting soy sauce glaze with sweet-and-sour, peanut and hot variations. 鈥淵ou do you,鈥 Bittman writes at one point.

鈥楩un visually鈥

It's a useful resource for first-time cooks, explaining things like garbanzo beans are the same as chickpeas and offering helpful sections on spices and herbs, kitchen equipment and how to prep everything from butternut squash to corn. There are pictures of kids throughout the book.

鈥淲e wanted it to feel inviting and fun visually for the kids. I think keeping their interest and holding their attention was something that we really wanted to do,鈥 says Jacqueline Quirk, an associate editor at Harvest, an imprint of HarperCollins.

Bittman says the hope is that 鈥淗ow to Cook Everything Kids鈥 will teach children that cooking isn't hard and they can produce things that taste good 鈥 lifelong paths toward better health and breaking the addiction to eating out.

鈥淚f you empower them to make it themselves, they鈥檒l be more likely to enjoy it, even if it鈥檚 a strange vegetable or something like that,鈥 says Quirk. 鈥淲e wanted to inspire an adventurousness in kids.鈥

Bittman is also the author of several books, including, among others, 鈥淗ow to Cook Everything,鈥 鈥淔ish,鈥 and 鈥淔ood Matters,鈥 which looks at the intersection of diet, personal and planetary health. Extending his franchise to kids made sense.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of stuff in here that 4- and 5-year-olds might get a kick out of if they鈥檙e so inclined,鈥 Bittman says. 鈥淭he important thing is that parents set the example and that鈥檚 a more important thing than having kids do hands-on cooking.鈥

He laughs that, when he was a kid, the only cooking he did was to mix chocolate syrup and peanut butter in a glass to see what would happen.

鈥淣ow you鈥檒l have 4-year-olds who will tell you that they want to be chefs when they grow up and that鈥檚 really different. Chefs were not visible people when I was younger, even when my kids were young,鈥 he says. 鈥淓ven being a food writer is an acceptable career.鈥

Color and sweetness but no mandolins

The book 鈥 organized by dishes like soups, breakfast, sandwiches, pasta, breads, main meals and grains and beans 鈥 reaches a crescendo with a beef and vegetable stir fry, a dish Bittman considers part of a holy trinity.

鈥淚 think there鈥檚 three critical recipes in this world. And they are: stir fry, rice and beans, and chopped salad. Imagine mastering those, or having a sense of those, when you were 12 鈥 you鈥檙e sort of set for life at that point,鈥 Bittman says.

鈥淎lmost everything that people wind up cooking can fall into one of those three categories. Those are sort of the mainstays of world cooking,鈥 he adds.

The book tries not to lean on kitchen machines 鈥 and urges kids to get a parent or caregiver to help with things like blenders 鈥 and one utensil was banished completely: the mandolin. Even Quirk is wary of them.

Bittman has bent to his audience to make visually attractive dishes 鈥 like pasta with blueberry 鈥 and cooks some ingredients, like sweet potatoes and carrots, for a long time so the natural sugars shine.

鈥淭here鈥檚 more color in here than we would normally pay attention to. And, quite frankly, there鈥檚 more sugar in here than we would normally pay attention to,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e are focusing on real foods and good foods, but we鈥檙e allowing for the fact that kids really do gravitate toward sweets and you have to accommodate that to some extent.鈥

Mark Kennedy, The Associated Press

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