Picky Eater Help

Expert Feeding Help
for Professionals and Parents

Melanie Potock’s keynotes, courses, books & articles focus on raising kids to be healthy, happy eaters. From babies to toddlers to teens, “Coach Mel” is here to help.

Raising a Healthy Happy Eater Isn’t Always Easy

Get Expert Advice on Feeding Babies, Toddlers & School Age Kids,

Including Extreme Picky Eaters

Upcoming Events & Courses

Babies

This book is designed to answer the most common questions about feeding babies and toddlers up to age three. It also debunks myths while offering practical tips on making mealtimes joyful and less stressful. It teaches a no-nonsense, straightforward approach to responsive feeding that’s focused on nurturing trust and communication between parent and child. Read more about Responsive Feeding here.

Toddlers & Preschoolers

In her award-winning book, Raising a Healthy Happy Eater, Melanie and her co-author, pediatrician Dr. Yum, teach parents how to guide their children on the path to adventurous eating.  Parents report that toddlers are the most challenging to feed, thanks to active little bodies and fleeting attention spans.  Learn how to lay positive foundations for eating at 6 months of age, navigate the “terrific twos” and avoid picky eating in the preschool years!  Get the brand new, updated 2nd edition. Read more about feeding young children here.

School Age

Kids can cook right along with their parents from an early age, but it’s especially important from preschool and into the elementary school years.  What’s the number one food group that parents struggle with the most?  Vegetables!  The secret to helping kids love any kind of food is to follow Melanie’s Three E’s: Expose, Explore, Expand.  You’ll learn how to use the Three E’s and create veggie-love in Melanie’s book, Adventures in Veggieland: Help Your Kids Learn to Love Vegetables with 100 Easy Activities and Recipes.  Read more about feeding school-age kids here.

More fun!

As a speech language pathologist, Melanie combined her love for language, little kids and food by writing a children’s book!  You are Not an Otter: The Story of How Kids Become Adventurous Eaters is available on Kindle, in paperback, and in both English and Spanish.  Don’t miss the parent tips in the back of the book!  Learn about all of Mel’s books here.


🍽️ Waiting for the food to arrive can be the hardest part of eating out with toddlers. If you’ve ever found yourself reaching for a screen just to make it through those first 15 minutes, you’re not alone.
 
Instead, I keep a tiny “restaurant kit” tucked in my purse with a few simple items that can keep little hands busy and curious:
📚 A miniature wipeable book
🍓 A fun food pick for self-feeding
🎩 A tiny toy for silly hide-and-seek games under cups
That’s it.
 
No batteries. No charging. No volume control. Just connection – isn’t that what mealtimes are all about?

What I love most is that these little activities keep children engaged with the people at the table, the food in front of them, and the experience of eating out together.

Sometimes the simplest tools create the sweetest restaurant memories. ❤️
 
✨ Comment REST and I’ll send you some of my favorite tools for making restaurant meals with toddlers more enjoyable for everyone.
 
🥰 Melanie
Restaurant tips • toddler activities • screen-free parenting • eating out with toddlers • family meals • picky eaters • feeding therapy
 🥰 Melanie
#melaniepotock #feedingtherapy #slpfeeding


❤️As feeding therapists, it’s easy to get frustrated when we hear advice like, “Let’s wait and see,” or “They’ll eat when they’re hungry enough.”
🤔But here’s something I hope we all remember:
 
Most pediatricians are seeing far more children each day than any of us could imagine. They’re balancing growth concerns, illnesses, behavior questions, sleep struggles, developmental milestones, insurance limitations, and worried parents, often in appointments that feel way too short. ❤️Instead of criticizing one another, let’s focus on helping families advocate for their children.
 
Here are 3 ways parents can have more productive conversations with their pediatrician:
1️⃣ Schedule time to talk when your child isn’t in the room.
A phone consult or dedicated appointment allows you to discuss concerns openly without little ears listening to every word.
2️⃣ Be honest about your stress.
Don’t minimize how hard mealtimes have become. Tell your pediatrician exactly what’s happening and specifically request a pediatric feeding evaluation if you believe additional support is needed.
3️⃣ Show, don’t just tell.
For three days, take a quick photo of your child’s plate before and after meals. Be sure to do this privately, without your child present. These photos often tell a much clearer story than trying to remember details during an appointment.
📖 These strategies come from Raising a Healthy Happy Eater, written by feeding specialist Melanie Potock and pediatrician Dr. Nimali Fernando.
 
⭐ Bonus Tip:
Pediatricians are facing tremendous pressure right now. Insurance requirements, endless paperwork, limited appointment times, and increasing demands can make an already difficult job even harder.
When your pediatrician listens to your concerns, takes a second look, or helps connect your family to resources, don’t underestimate the power of a simple:
💛 “Thank you for helping me advocate for my (this) child.”
 
✨Because collaboration begins with respect, and kids benefit most when we’re all on the same team.
 
💡 Comment #BOOKS if you’d like to peek inside the award-winning Raising a Healthy Happy Eater.

Send


🍎 Most kids don’t need apples cut up after the age of 3 ⚠️BUT... they need to learn to use their to get the safest JUST RIGHT BITE.
If your child tends to take giant bites out of apples, pears, or other firm round fruits, OR they just can’t figure out how to bite into ROUND surfaces -  this simple feeding therapy trick can make a big difference.

✨ Create a flat edge, then notch to appropriate size bites before offering the fruit.  That tiny change gives your child a clear starting point and helps them learn how much food to bite off at one time.
 
This was my original idea over 25 years ago and I continue to use it to this day because:
🍏 Encourages safer biting skills
🍏 Helps children learn bite-size awareness
🍏 Builds confidence with harder fruits
🍏 Supports independent eating
 
I still use this trick all the time in feeding therapy with children ages 3+ who are still learning how to manage larger, firmer foods. Feeding is a developmental process. Sometimes the smallest adjustments lead to the biggest breakthroughs.
 
Want MORE PRACTIAL TIPS like this one?
✨ Comment CLEAN and I’ll send you a 40% discount code for my most popular course, The Feeding Development Course, packed with practical tips like this one to help you raise an adventurous eater. (Code exp 6/13/26 so don’t wait!)
 
🥰 Melanie
Thank you for following me for weekly feeding guidance grounded in 25+ years helping parents & therapists help kids find joy in food.
apple safety / feeding therapy / toddler feeding / preschool feeding / picky eaters / oral motor skills / self feeding / feeding development / adventurous eaters / parenting tips


🍉❄️ Want a fun summer snack that actually helps build eating skills?
This viral watermelon ice isn’t just fun to eat. As a feeding therapist, I see several reasons it can help children become more adventurous eaters.

🍉 1. It introduces a new sensory experience.
Frozen grated watermelon is more than cold. It’s icy! Children benefit from experiencing a variety of safe textures, flavors, and temperatures. Watermelon ice melts quickly in the mouth, making it a low-pressure way to explore something new.

🥄 2. It’s great practice for spoon skills.
As the watermelon melts, children learn to manage both the ice shavings and the liquid in the bowl. That takes coordination! I love activities like this because they help build skills that transfer to foods like soups, broths, and other spoonable foods.

👉🏼 Coach Mel Tip: Start with just a small amount in the bowl so the liquid barely covers the spoon. This reduces sticky spills and helps children feel successful. A suction bowl can help too!

🧤 3. Older kids can help make it.
The more children participate in food preparation, the more interested they often become in trying foods. Older children can practice kitchen skills by wearing a protective glove and safely grating frozen watermelon into individual bowls.

After helping more than 10,000 children learn to enjoy food, I can tell you that playful food experiences matter.
🗣️ Comment TOOLS and I’ll send you my favorite kitchen tools for kids, including child-sized safety gloves, toddler knives, crinkle cutters, and more!  I LOVE a crinkle cutter for serving watermelon – makes each slippery piece so much easier to hold!
 
🥰 Melanie
Thank you for following me for weekly feeding guidance grounded in 25+ years helping parents & therapists help kids find joy in food.
Watermelon ice / summer snacks / toddler feeding / picky eater tips / feeding therapy / spoon skills / sensory food play / kitchen skills for kids / adventurous eaters / responsive feeding


If you enjoyed watching me drop things, startle babies, and question my life choices while making content... do me a favor. 💕

When friends leave kind comments, drop a ❤️, or share a post when something resonates with you…well…Your comments and hearts genuinely keep me motivated to keep showing up, creating, and sharing feeding tips for families.

Your ❤️ and comments tell that darn algorithm to pay attention to me - and that helps more families find trusted feeding guidance... and reminds me that all the bloopers are worth it. 😅

XOXO ❤️Melanie

Content creator bloopers / behind the scenes / pediatric feeding therapist / speech pathologist / feeding therapist / toddler feeding / picky eating help / parent support / mealtime tips / child development / Coach Mel / feeding expert


Nope! Try serving a small portion of fruit right alongside the meal. WHY?🤔
(First, follow @mymunchbug_melaniepotock  for daily tips like this!) 
 
👉🏻Because parents decide what’s available, and children decide whether to eat it and how much.❤️ That means it’s perfectly okay to put a reasonable portion of fruit on the plate and let your child enjoy it.
 
🤦🏼‍♀️”But what if they eat all the fruit first and ask for more?”
That’s where your job as the parent comes in.
 
You might simply say:
💬 “The fruit is all gone for now.”
💬 “I’ll bring fruit to the park for snack.”
💬 “For lunch, we have these foods.” (point to the plate)
👉🏻👉🏻Then repeat it once more if needed. After that, it’s okay to stop explaining.
Your child heard you.
 
When we repeat ourselves over and over, we often end up inviting a debate rather than holding a boundary. Calmly repeating the same message once or twice helps children learn that the answer isn’t changing, while keeping mealtimes more peaceful for everyone.
Just calm, confident boundaries.
 
🤦🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️”But what if they refuse to eat the rest of the meal? “ They will be ok, but they will be hungry again, and soon.  That’s the hard part – but try to distract them until the next eating opportunity, and no, I would not offer fruit then.
 
Children don’t need unlimited access to a favorite food, even one as nutritious as fruit. They need loving structure around food and mealtimes. 
 
In 25+ years of feeding therapy, I’ve found that clear boundaries and low pressure often work better than trying to control the order in which children eat their food. Our job is to decide what, when, and where food is served. Our child’s job is to decide whether to eat and how much.(📖Satter DOR) 
 
🥰 Melanie
 
Disclaimer: This may not be the best strategy for extreme picky eaters. They need a safe food, if their repertoire is very limited. That’s a whole other situation!
Fruit for kids / responsive feeding / toddler meals / picky eating help / feeding therapy / family meals / parenting boundaries / child nutrition / raising adventurous eaters


🍪 What if dessert wasn’t the prize for eating dinner?
 
Most of us were raised hearing things like:
“Eat your vegetables first.”🥦
“You can have dessert if you behave.”😳
“Finish your dinner, then you get a treat.”
 
❤️And while those messages were given with the best intentions, they can accidentally teach children that dessert is more valuable, more exciting, and more desirable than every other food on the table.
 
Over time, kids may begin to worship dessert.
👉🏻They rush through meals to get it.
👉🏻They negotiate for it.
👉🏻They think about it the entire time they’re eating.
 
One strategy that can help reduce the power struggle is to occasionally serve a small portion of dessert with the meal.
❌Not every day.
❌Not at every meal.
Just often enough that dessert stops feeling like the grand prize at the end of a competition.
 
When a child learns that a cookie, brownie bite, or small piece of cake is simply one of many foods available, it often becomes less emotionally charged.
 
👉🏻The goal isn’t to eliminate dessert.
👉🏻The goal is to help children learn that all foods can fit, and that no single food needs to sit on a pedestal.
 
In 25+ years of feeding therapy, I’ve found that children often become more relaxed around sweets when we stop making them feel so special.Feeding is a developmental process, and helping children build a healthy relationship with food is just as important as helping them eat their vegetables.
🥰 Melanie
 
🛟Save this for later & share it with a parent who grew up earning dessert after dinner.
Dessert with dinner / responsive feeding / picky eating / feeding therapy / toddler meals / preschool meals / family meals / raising adventurous eaters / food relationship / child feeding expert


🧀 National Cheese Day & one of my favorite toddler snacks but safety counts too! Did you know that string cheese is actually designed to be pulled into strings?
 
When serving string cheese to toddlers and preschoolers, I recommend pulling it into thin strands rather than serving the whole stick.
 
⚠️ Avoid cutting string cheese into coin-shaped rounds. Those round pieces can create a choking hazard because they may block a child’s airway.
 
Instead:
✔️ Pull it into strings
✔️ Tear it into small pieces
✔️ Continue modifying it this way through about age 4
 
Why do I love cheese for kids?
🧀 It contains protein to support growth and help keep little tummies satisfied.
🧀 It provides calcium, which helps build strong bones and teeth.
🧀 It comes in many shapes, flavors, and textures, making it a wonderful food for helping children explore variety.
 
In 25+ years of feeding therapy, I’ve learned that small food-preparation changes can make a big difference in both safety and confidence at the table.
Offer safe foods in safe ways, and let your child build skills one bite at a time.
 
🥰 Melanie
National Cheese Day / string cheese / toddler snacks / choking prevention / feeding therapy / preschool snacks / child safety / protein for kids / calcium for kids / adventurous eaters


I’ve been keeping this one quiet… and it’s finally time to share it.🥳(VezaFlex™ Partner) 
Feeding development / picky eating / mealtime routines/ high chair
 
After feeding over 10,000 kids as a pediatric feeding specialist - I’ve seen how often mealtime struggles come down to one thing:
👉🏼 A mismatch between what we EXPECT to happen
👉🏼 And what your child’s BODY actually NEEDS to happen
 
So when I had the chance to help design something that supports movement, choice, and connection… I said yes 💚 
I am thrilled to share the VERY FIRST 
sit-or-stand high chair for babies, toddlers and big kids too!
👉🏻Some kids need to stand and eat.  ALL kids need correct positioning, and a chair designed alongside pediatric experts – and you need the flexibility to provide sitting or standing at mealtimes, because the way kids love to eat today will quickly change tomorrow!
 
👉🏼 Comment VEZA to join the early notification list for the VezaFlex™. The limited Founders Release is expected to go quickly, & you’ll be first to know when chairs become available.
 
💚 Melanie
 
Melanie Potock / VEZA highchair / picky eating / feeding therapy / toddler behavior / mealtime struggles / baby led weaning / feeding development / pediatric feeding disorder / sensory feeding / responsive feeding / standing high  chair


🫣 Got a picky eater...or hoping to avoid the picky eater trap altogether?
Well, I should probably be cleaning my kitchen.🪣🧹
 
Instead, I created a 40% OFF discount code for you. 😂
 
My kitchen is currently a visual representation of what happens when a feeding therapist spends more time talking about food than cleaning up after it.
 
But here’s the good news:
🥣🥣🥣🥣While I continue pretending that pile of dishes doesn’t exist, you can grab my most popular course designed to help parents raise more adventurous eaters.
Inside, you’ll learn:
✔️ What a top-notch pediatrician thinks will help (and she knows her stuff!)
✔️ How to encourage variety without battles
✔️ What to do when kids get stuck on preferred foods
✔️ Practical strategies grounded in responsive feeding and my 25+ years as a pediatric feeding specialist
✔️Tips from an RDN and a psychologist who specializes in pediatric anxiety
 
So before I come to my senses and start scrubbing pots, take advantage of the discount code.
 
✨ Comment CLEAN and I’ll send you all the details. (❤️Be sure you’re following me to get that message.)

And if your kitchen looks anything like mine today, no judgment here. We’re all doing our best. 😅
 
🥰 Melanie
feeding therapy / picky eater / adventurous eater / responsive feeding / toddler feeding / preschool feeding / family meals / feeding development / parenting tips


If you’re confused about how to help children with ARFID, you’re not alone. 💛
After specializing in helping kids with ARFID for over ten years, I’ve found that many feeding professionals are missing 3 critical pieces - because they don’t teach you  this in graduate school…
1️⃣ Understanding the role anxiety plays in food avoidance.
2️⃣ Knowing how to gently nudge a child forward. Kids with ARFID are not being defiant. They’re stuck. And helping them move forward requires a very different approach.
3️⃣ Understanding the complexities of parenting a child with ARFID. These are often wonderful parents raising wonderful kids. The change in a child’s eating often begins when we help caregivers understand how anxiety, accommodations, and feeding interactions influence progress.
ARFID is complex. But it becomes much less confusing when you understand the “why” behind the behavior.
 
🧐If you’re ready to bring more clarity, confidence, and compassion to your work with children and families, join me for my FINAL 2026 live (virtual) ARFID Masterclass of the year on August 9. 
🧠 4 hours of focused learning
💻 Live and interactive
🎓 ASHA CEUs available, certificates for all professionals
🎤 Limited enrollment – small class size for the best learning experience!
 
Just a few seats remain.
Comment ARFID and I’ll send you the details.

❤️Melanie
✨ Thank you for following me for weekly feeding guidance grounded in 25+ years of feeding therapy, helping parents and therapists help kids find joy in food.


Parents of picky eaters, this is one of the most helpful nutrition facts I’ve learned from an RDN 20 years ago...

When we think about constipation, we often hear, “Just give more fiber.”

But kids actually benefit from two different types of fiber:

✅ Insoluble fiber adds bulk to the stool and helps support movement through the digestive tract.

✅ Soluble fiber absorbs water and helps soften the stool.

The good news? Most foods contain a mix of both types of fiber, which is one reason I’m always encouraging families to offer a variety of foods.

Here are a few easy ways to boost fiber intake:

🥄 Stir chia seeds into yogurt, oatmeal, or applesauce

🫘 Mash black beans into soups, dips, quesadillas, or taco meat

🥣 Use ground oats for  muffins, pancakes, or meatballs

🌱 Blend flaxseed or chia seeds into smoothies (not both)

🍓 Continue offering a variety of fruits, vegetables, beans, whole grains, nuts, and seeds when developmentally appropriate

💩Remember, constipation isn’t always solved by adding one “magic” food. Variety matters because different foods provide different nutrients, textures, and types of fiber that help support healthy digestion.

Learning to eat a wide variety of foods can support gut health for years to come.

✨ Thank you for following me for weekly feeding guidance grounded in 25+ years of feeding therapy, helping parents and therapists help kids find joy in food.

🥰Melanie

Melaniepotock / fiber for kids / toddler constipation / soluble fiber / insoluble fiber / picky eater tips / toddler nutrition / healthy digestion / gut health for kids / feeding development / vegetables for toddlers / constipation relief for kids


Melanie Potock

Pediatric Feeding Expert and Author

Melanie Potock, MA, CCC-SLP is a mom who once had a picky eater.  She’s experienced first-hand the stress that parents feel when they are worried about their child’s nutritional health.  Fast forward to today, and you’ll find Melanie blending her knowledge of feeding therapy with practical parenting strategies that help the entire family eat healthier.  She’s an international speaker and author of six books, including co-authoring the award-winning Raising a Healthy Happy Eater.  Whether you’re raising a child who seems to be on the path to loving all kinds of healthy foods (and you want to keep it that way) or if your child is stuck in the chicken nugget rut, “Coach Mel” is here to guide you.

Melanie's Advice Shared In...

  • Washington Post
  • PBS Kids
  • Wall Street Journal
  • Autism Parenting Magazine
  • CNN
  • ASHA Blog
  • ASHA Leader
  • Parents.com
  • The Bump
  • New York Times
  • WebMD
  • Parents
  • Romper
  • Fit Pregnancy
  • Georgia Chapter AAP
  • Fatherly
  • Care.com
  • Dr. Greene
  • Yahoo Parenting

Courses for Parents & Professionals

Melanie offers both on-demand courses and live-streaming Masterclasses.  CEUs are optional for both OTs and SLPs, yet audience members include parents, RDs, pediatricians & other health care professionals.

Need help with a picky eater, or just want to prevent kids from falling into the chicken-nugget rut?  As a parent, SLP or OT, what do you need to know about child nutrition?  What about the anxious eater – Could this be more than just picky eating?  Melanie’s on-demand course subscriptions provide the answers!

Want more in-depth instruction in a small group, virtual setting?  Register for one of Melanie’s Masterclass!

Explore course options here.

Booking Signing

Parenting Advice

Melanie’s advice has been shared in The New York Times, Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, Parents Magazine and more. Over 150 articles for both parents and professionals are found here or contact Melanie for a personal one-hour coaching session via video chat.

Masterclass participants get a 25% discount on coaching.

Learn more about professional and parent coaching here.

Keynote Speaking

An international speaker, award-winning author and pediatric feeding specialist, audiences find Melanie’s advice to be practical and possible, even in the most challenging cases.  That’s because Melanie is in the trenches, working closely with the most extreme picky eaters and supporting families and health professionals around the world. Melanie has been invited to speak at over 100 different events, including the American Speech Language Hearing Association’s National Conference and the Food and Nutrition Conference and Expo.

Audiences say it best: If you are looking for a professional speaker who can “provide practical solutions” for parents, caregivers and therapists and your company needs a “highly knowledgeable, organized presenter” with “energy and enthusiasm” who can deliver a “dynamic course”, then your best choice is Melanie Potock. Contact Melanie here.

Product Consulting

Need expert input on your new parenting product?  Melanie has provided expert advice for Orgain, Inc., Holland Health Care, Inc., Healthy Height, Inc., NumNum, LLC and numerous health care and parent product companies.

Looking for an expert to educate your team on how children learn to become adventurous eaters, baby-self feeding or the importance of purees?  Feeding is developmental, just like learning to crawl, walk, run. At least 1 in 4 typically developing children have trouble learning to eat!  Raising a healthy, happy eater requires the right tools and the right advice.  Melanie provides company education and collaboration via webinars, social media and creating educational videos for your audience.

Contact Melanie here.

Blog

feeding advice for parents and professionals

+
Parenting a Picky Eater,

50 Easy Ways to Get Your Kid to Eat New Foods

By Salma Abdelnour Gilman It may seem like an impossible dream right now, but your kid has the potential to love all kinds...Read More
+
Sensory Concerns,

A Special Needs Guide for Learning to Eat with Your SEVEN Senses – Part One

  Most of us think of five senses and the human body: Sight, sound, smell, taste and touch. But, when it comes...Read More
+
Parenting a Picky Eater,

3 Ways to Explain Baby-Led Feeding to Your Extended Family

By Melanie Potock, MA, CCC-SLP Whether it’s a holiday dinner, a virtual family brunch or an outdoor family picnic, well-meaning relatives may...Read More
+
Parenting a Picky Eater,

Planting for Kids

By The Lettuce Grow Team Melanie Potock has a knack for taking eaters of all ages from picky to passionate. Here are a...Read More