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, ā€œCoach Melā€ 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.Ā  Parents report that toddlers are the most challenging to feed, thanks to active little bodies and fleeting attention spans.Ā  Learn how to lay positive foundations for eating at 6 months of age, navigate the ā€œterrific twosā€ and avoid picky eating in the preschool years!Ā  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.Ā  What’s the number one food group that parents struggle with the most?Ā  Vegetables!Ā  The secret to helping kids love any kind of food is to follow Melanie’s Three E’s: Expose, Explore, Expand.Ā  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.Ā  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!Ā  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.Ā  Don’t miss the parent tips in the back of the book!Ā  Learn about all of Mel’s books here.


In 25+ years as a feeding therapist, I’ve seen how powerful food exposure can be before a child ever takes a bite.
šŸ“š This isn’t just my observation. Research suggests that involving children in selecting and preparing fruits & vegetables may increase their interest in these foods and support more positive eating habits over time. I’ll place the citation in the comments if you’d like to take a closer look.
 
šŸ›’Here are 3 reasons I encourage parents to bring young children along when shopping for produce:
šŸ„• 1. Familiarity reduces fear
Children are more likely to try foods they’ve seen, touched, smelled, selected, and helped purchase.
🄬 2. It builds food curiosity
The produce section is full of opportunities to explore colors, shapes, textures, and names of foods without any pressure to eat them.
šŸ“ 3. It creates ownership
When children help choose a fruit or vegetable, they’re often more interested in seeing it again at home, helping prepare it, and sometimes even tasting it.

🄦 Coach Mel Tip: Let your child choose one produce item each week.
 
And remember, you don’t have to buy the whole thing! Ask them to pick a single broccoli floret, one mushroom, one kiwi, or a few green beans. Most produce is sold by weight, making this an inexpensive way to build food curiosity without wasting food.
āŒThe goal isn’t to get them to eat it.
ā¤ļøThe goal is to help them become comfortable around it.
 
Did this surprise you? Save this for your next grocery trip & share it with a parent who need motivation to take their child shopping.
 
✨ 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.
🄰Coach Mel 

Melanie Potock
grocery shopping with toddlers / picky eating / adventurous eaters / toddler nutrition / fruits & vegetables / feeding development / responsive feeding / food exposure / preschoolers / healthy eating habits / grocery store learning / raising adventurous eaters


Hey Gen Z, here I am accidentally crushing it on social media by putting on shoes. šŸ˜‰

ā¤ļøSo follow along for 25+ years of experience in feeding therapy, pick eating tips, starting solid strategies and apparently… shoe content now.šŸ‘Ÿ

🄰Melanie 

melaniepotock / picky eaters / slp feeding / responsive feeding / kids eat veggies


And that’s exactly how feeding & brain development works. šŸ’š
I see this all the time:

šŸ„’šŸ„•Many toddlers can sort green cucumber sticks from orange carrots long before they can actually SAY ā€œgreenā€ or ā€œorange.ā€

That’s because color learning happens in stages. 
 
✨ First: Matching
Children learn to group identical colors together around 18 months.
✨ Next: Receptive understanding
They can point to a color when asked:
ā€œCan you hand me the orange carrot?ā€
✨ Later: Expressive naming
While it varies a bit, most children consistently name colors closer to ages 3–4.
 
I love combining my knowledge as speech language pathologist into feeding therapy! Here are more tips for you:
 
šŸ¤”Toddlers often think the color word IS the object name.
So instead of saying:
āŒ ā€œThe green pepperā€
Try:
āœ… ā€œThe pepper IS green.ā€
That tiny wording change helps children understand that color is simply one feature of the food.
 
Easy ways to build color learning during meals & snack time:
🌈 Sort veggies by color together
🌈 Make a ā€œgreen foodsā€ or ā€œorange foodsā€ snack plate
🌈 Try Color Days in Therapy Sessions!
Wear green, play with kiwi & cucumbers, draw with green crayons
🌈 Use simple language:
ā€œThe carrot is orange.ā€
ā€œThe pea is green.ā€
Color play with food builds more than vocabulary.
It supports categorization, visual learning, language development & ESPECIALLY comfort exploring foods in playful, pressure-free ways.

Feeding is a developmental process – and cognitive development is a BIG part of it! šŸ’•
🄰 Melanie
Toddler feeding / picky eating / toddler development / vegetables for toddlers / food play / language development / color matching / preschool learning / feeding therapy / responsive feeding / child development / pediatric SLP / learning through play


šŸ„• Raw veggies can be a great way for toddlers to build chewing skills when served safely.
✨One of my favorite tricks for children between ages 2 and 4 is to cut firm raw vegetables into thin matchsticks instead of serving larger pieces.
Why?
āœ”ļø Easier to bite off manageable pieces
āœ”ļø Easier to chew thoroughly
āœ”ļø Reduces choking risk
āœ”ļø Gives toddlers practice with more advanced textures
 
Try matchstick-sized:
šŸ„• Carrots
šŸ„’ Cucumbers (thinly sliced wheels work here too!)
šŸ«‘ Bell peppers
🄬 Jicama
🄦 Broccoli stems, outer ā€œskinā€ removed
 
āš ļø Important: Raw vegetables are not appropriate for most babies under age 2. Always consider your child’s chewing skills, developmental readiness, and supervise closely during meals.
Feeding is a developmental process. Small changes in how we prepare foods can help children safely build the skills they need to become adventurous eaters.
 
🄰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.

Starting solids / toddler feeding / chewing skills / choking prevention / toddler snacks / feeding therapy / picky eating / baby led weaning / child development / healthy eating habits / responsive feeding / family meals / pediatric feeding specialist / oral motor development / toddler nutrition


As we gather with family and friends this Memorial Day, we remember those who never made it home. Their service, sacrifice, and dedication to protecting others deserve our gratitude, today and every day.ā¤ļø
 
ā¤ļøMelanie

Melanie Potock / Memorial Day / remembering the fallen / gratitude / military families / family gatherings / honoring service / American traditions / community / reflection / patriotism / sacrifice and remembrance


šŸ¦ Sticky fingers don’t always need a wipe!
✨One of my favorite mealtime tricks is bringing back the finger bowl…once a symbol of elegant dining in fancy restaurants and formal dinner parties. Today, it might just be one of the smartest parenting hacks for sticky little hands! šŸ’¦

ā¤ļøA simple bowl of water at the table gives children a chance to rinse sticky fingers independently after foods like ice cream, watermelon, popsicles, yogurt, sauces, and more.

Why do I love it?
šŸ’¦ Encourages independence
šŸ’¦ Reduces battles over messy hands
šŸ’¦ Keeps sticky fingers off chairs, clothes & furniture
šŸ’¦ Makes cleanup part of the mealtime routine
šŸ’¦ Adds a little fun to mealtimes

Sometimes the simplest solutions are the ones worth bringing back. And unlike a stack of wipes, a finger bowl invites children to participate in caring for themselves.
🄰 Melanie

Finger bowl / toddler tips / preschooler tips / self-feeding / mealtime independence / messy play / feeding development / responsive feeding / parenting tips / picky eating support / family meals / Montessori at home / Coach Mel


šŸ„œšŸŒ±šŸžOnce baby safely tolerates an allergen, don’t stop there.  There are NINE Top Allergens that need to be offered (in small amounts) each week, and once you’re baby has had several, you can start to combine them, and spread them on a strip of toast for THREE allergens per bite!

starting solids / baby led weaning / allergen introduction / food allergies in babies
 
šŸžSchmear on a strip of wheat toast:
🄜 Peanut butter + full-fat yogurt
🄚 Scrambled egg + with a bit of tahini 
🐟 Smashed salmon + scrambled egg
 
✨The key? Keep it simple, baby-safe & easy to repeat each week so allergens stay in rotation consistently.
 
🄳Research suggests that regular exposure matters, which is why I encourage families to keep allergens in rotation a few times each week in simple, baby-safe ways. 🄚🄜🐟
 
✨I FIND A CHART that’s EASY to follow helps the most! Comment HANDOUTS for free guides in both English & Spanish on every stage of your baby’s feeding development, plus my allergen exposure tracking chart to help you stay consistent!
 
🄰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.
 
 Allergy Awareness Month / peanut introduction / egg introduction / sesame allergy / feeding baby safely / baby nutrition / responsive feeding / pediatric feeding therapist / infant feeding / baby feeding tips / early allergen exposure / feeding development / introducing allergens weekly / picky eating prevention / baby led feeding / family meals / Coach Mel / Melanie Potock


šŸ˜‚ Pediatric feeding therapist humor is oddly specific…But every one of these ā€œmoviesā€ has a little truth behind it. šŸ‘‡šŸ¼

🄪 The Silence of the Hams
I rarely meet a picky eater who happily eats wet sandwich ham. Seriously… does anyone have a picky eater who eats ham? I need to meet your kid.šŸ˜‰

šŸæ Nightmare on Snack Street
Snacking all day long can become a nightmare for appetite development. Kids need breaks between eating opportunities to build hunger, curiosity & interest in food.

šŸ˜µā€šŸ’« The Gagging
A little gagging when babies start solids can actually be protective & helpful. But persistent or excessive gagging deserves a closer look.

🌭 Children of the Corn Dogs
Hot dogs & corn dogs are among the biggest choking risks for children under age 4. 

šŸŽļø The Fast & the Furious: Mealtime Edition
Kids who eat SUPER fast sometimes need support with pacing, regulation & a hungry-not-hangry eating schedule.

šŸŸ Lord of the Fries
Ever notice that highly anxious eaters can detect the difference between one fry brand & another without ever seeing the packaging? Sensory differences & anxiety are real.

šŸ¹ The Hunger Games: Toddler Edition
The complete opposite of ā€œFast & Furious.ā€ These are the kids who seem to survive on three crackers, one berry & pure determination. sometimes they need a consistent schedule, another time a full medical workup will reveal reasons why.

Because feeding is developmental, sensory, emotional, motor-based & relational all at once… and sometimes it can be scary. But with the right support, these kids become more adventurous eaters.ā¤ļø
 
🄰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.
Picky eating / ARFID / feeding therapy / responsive feeding / toddler meals / sensory eating / oral motor development / choking prevention / family meals


Picky eating & worrying about your kids nutritional health is so stressful! 

Try making these with your kids - and don’t forget the dance party!šŸ‘Æā€ā™€ļø 

Thank you for dropping a ā¤ļø- I love knowing you’re enjoying my content!
🄰Melanie

✨ AND…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. melaniepotock /feedingtherapy /slpfeeding / pickyeaters feedinglittles


Melanie Potock

Pediatric Feeding Expert and Author

Melanie Potock, MA, CCC-SLP is a mom who once had a picky eater.Ā  She’s experienced first-hand the stress that parents feel when they are worried about their child’s nutritional health.Ā  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.Ā  She’s an international speaker and author of six books, including co-authoring the award-winning Raising a Healthy Happy Eater.Ā  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, ā€œCoach Melā€ 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.Ā  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?Ā  As a parent, SLP or OT, what do you need to know about child nutrition?Ā  What about the anxious eater – Could this be more than just picky eating?Ā  Melanie’s on-demand course subscriptions provide the answers!

Want more in-depth instruction in a small group, virtual setting?Ā  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.Ā  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 ā€œprovide practical solutionsā€ for parents, caregivers and therapists and your company needs a ā€œhighly knowledgeable, organized presenterā€ with ā€œenergy and enthusiasmā€ who can deliver a ā€œdynamic courseā€, then your best choice is Melanie Potock. Contact Melanie here.

Product Consulting

Need expert input on your new parenting product?Ā  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?Ā  Feeding is developmental, just like learning to crawl, walk, run. At least 1 in 4 typically developing children have trouble learning to eat! Ā Raising a healthy, happy eater requires the right tools and the right advice. Ā 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

ByĀ 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
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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 PotockĀ has a knack for taking eaters of all ages from picky to passionate. Here are a...Read More