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Kids Get Cooking!

Cooking can be fun for kids—and it’s a valuable skill.

A smiling tween girl uses a spatula in a frying pan while her mother supervises and smiles.

© Monkey Business/stock.adobe.com

“What’s for dinner?” If you’ve ever asked that question, you were probably speaking to an adult. But experts say there are plenty of good reasons for kids to learn how to cook.

Becca Cooper Leebove knows this firsthand. Five years ago, she began teaching her kids, then ages 3 and 8, some simple cooking skills. They started by pouring ingredients into a bowl and rolling out dough. Today, they’re chopping and sauteing.

“My…goal has always been family time—something to do together that’s engaging, but also important to get them off their phones or iPads,” Leebove told the Associated Press.

Making a meal also teaches kids what experts call “food skills.” These include planning the meal, grocery shopping, reading food labels, and preparing the meal. By cooking, kids learn to follow a recipe, measure ingredients, and manage their time. All these skills will come in handy later, when kids grow up and have their own households.

There’s also some evidence that when kids help to cook a meal, they’re more likely to eat ingredients they’d normally reject. Some kids refuse to even try certain vegetables. But picky eaters might be more willing to taste the vegetables that they chopped and cooked.

That could tie in with another advantage to cooking from scratch: Studies show a link between cooking and healthier eating habits.

For all these reasons, kids’ cooking classes are widely available, including at many public libraries.

Jessica Battilana is a staff editor at King Arthur Baking Company, where both kids and adults can take cooking classes. She suggests that kids start by preparing simple dishes, like scrambled eggs, and gradually try more challenging recipes. Good cooking doesn’t have to be fancy.

“[Kids are] capable of a lot, and usually pretty eager to try new foods—especially if they’ve had a hand in making them,” Battilana told the Associated Press.

NEWS EXTRA

Mark Carney Wins Canada’s Election

Mark Carney smiles and claps while standing at a podium in front of a Canadian flag.

© Dave Chan—AFP/Getty Images

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney celebrates at an election victory party on April 29.

The results are in!

Prime Minister Mark Carney won Canada’s federal (national) election, which took place on April 28. Carney’s Liberal Party will now enter its fourth straight term in charge of the nation’s government.

Canadians have federal elections at least every five years. Citizens don’t vote for their prime minister directly. Here’s how Canadian elections work:

Canada is a federal parliamentary democracy. The prime minister is the head of government, and Parliament is the lawmaking body. When Canadians go to the polls, they vote for members of Parliament. The government is then run by the political party that wins the greatest number of seats in Parliament. The head of that party serves as the prime minister. Canada has four main political parties. The Liberal Party has run the nation’s government since 2015.

Carney has been Canada’s prime minister since March 2025, when former prime minister Justin Trudeau resigned and Carney became the head of the Liberal Party.

Fun Fact Icon

Fun Fact!

According to Guinness World Records, Justin Miller of the United States is the youngest person ever to publish a cookbook. Cooking with Justin: Recipes for Kids (And Parents) was published in 1997 when Justin was 7 years old.

Illustration of a boy and a girl wearing chefs’ hats and coats and holding equipment in a kitchen.

© jemastock—iStock/Getty Images

A World of Yumminess

If you’re interested in learning how to cook, you might want to try some dishes from around the world!

Four thin pancakes on a wooden plate with a small bowl of orange sauce.

© ManojKumar/stock.adobe.com

Dosas (India)

These thin pancakes are made with a batter of ground rice, lentils, and water. They’re often served with chutney, which is like a spicy jam.

A hand reaches to remove a Yorkshire pudding from a baking tin on which there are 10 Yorkshire puddings.

© ManojKumar/stock.adobe.com

Yorkshire Pudding (United Kingdom)

Yorkshire pudding is made by combining flour, eggs, milk, and oil into a batter and then baking it in individual portions. The result is a big hollow pastry that’s crispy on the outside.

Meat, red beans and other ingredients are on a bed of lettuce.

© Roger/stock.adobe.com

Waakye (Ghana)

Waakye is prepared by cooking rice and beans together in a pot of water. The leaves of a plant called sorghum are added, giving the dish a red-brown color. Many people eat waakye with fish or a banana-like fruit called a plantain.

A bowl contains white rice and chicken topped with green onions and red peppers.

© weyo/stock.adobe.com

Thai Curry (Thailand)

In Thailand, curries have a thick or thin sauce made with coconut milk, chilies, and a blend of herbs and spices. Curries can include many kinds of meats and vegetables.

A bowl contains red soup with some chopped green onions, cucumbers, and red peppers.

© pilipphoto/stock.adobe.com

Gazpacho (Spain)

This cold tomato soup includes cucumbers, onions, and peppers, blended together to make a refreshing summertime dish. Bread is often added to make gazpacho thicker.

Three arepas containing different kinds of meat are arranged on a wooden board.

© andres/stock.adobe.com

Arepas (Venezuela, Colombia, and more)

Arepas are fried cornmeal cakes. Although they’re delicious on their own, they can also be stuffed with different ingredients, including beans, cheese, or meat.

A bowl of red soup containing some large pieces of beet as well as sour cream and chives is next to two spoons.

© Julia Sedaeva/stock.adobe.com

Borscht (Ukraine)

This soup is made by combining beets, carrots, potatoes, and other ingredients with meat stock (which is similar to broth). The beets give borscht its flavor and its trademark red color.

Be a Chef!

Cristeta Comerford and Susie Morrison stand in a room in the White House wearing chefs’ hats and coats and holding a plate of food in each hand.

© Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Imagine cooking for presidents! Cristeta Comerford (left) served as the Executive Chef of the White House from 2005 to 2024. Susie Morrison (right) has been the Executive Pastry Chef of the White House since 2014.

Professional cooks are called chefs. Chefs, who work in restaurants, hotels, and other places where food is served, usually have special training in a variety of cooking methods.

 

You can learn more about chefs—and how to become one—at Britannica!

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Word of the Day

culinary

Part of speech:

adjective

Definition:

: used in or relating to cooking

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