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Charlotte’s Easy Beans & Jacket

Charlotte Stirling-Reed RNutr

Effort:
Complexity:
Cost:
In season now

Serves: 4

Prep time: 10 mins

Cook time: 30 mins

Ingredients:

500g baby potatoes, washed and dried

1 tbsp olive oil, plus a little extra for drizzling

1 garlic clove, peeled and finely chopped

4 spring onions, trimmed and finely sliced

1 celery stick, trimmed and finely chopped

1 medium carrot, peeled and finely grated

1 tsp smoked sweet paprika

500g tomato passata

2 x 400g tins beans (e.g. cannellini, haricot, or butter beans), drained and rinsed

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Who doesn’t love jacket potato and BEANS. It’s an absolute staple for many families in the UK, and rightly so! If you’re looking for a comforting family meal that’s both balanced, simple and well accepted by all the family, baked beans are ideal. This homemade jacket potato with baked beans is a brilliant and simple alternative to the shop-bought versions – without the added salt and sugar. By making your own baked beans, you can also include a variety of different beans an legumes, helping to boost plant diversity in your family’s diet. It’s a great way to introduce little ones to different textures and flavours, while keeping mealtimes balanced and satisfying for everyone. Plus, it’s easy to batch cook and freeze these beans, making it a go-to for busy weekdays!

Method:

  1. Preheat the oven to 200°C / 180°C fan / gas 6.
  2. Add the potatoes to a baking tray, drizzle with oil and roast for 30 mins until golden and crispy.
  3. Meanwhile, heat a little oil in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add garlic, spring onions, celery and carrot and cook for 7 mins, stirring regularly until softened. Stir in the paprika and cook for 1 minute. Add the passata and beans, and cook gently for another 8 mins, stirring occasionally.
  4. Spoon the beans with the roasted mini jackets. Mash the beans with the back of a fork for younger babies.
Engaging Kids

Engaging Kids

Kids who engage regularly with veg through veg-themed activities, such as arts and crafts, sensory experiences, growing and cooking are shown to be more likely to eat the veg they engage with. Encouraging kids to engage and play with veg is the handy first step to them developing a good relationship with veg and life-long healthy eating.

Kids in the kitchen

Kids in the kitchen

Kids could wash and dry the potatoes, and drizzle them with oil. They could help you carefully spoon the beans over the jackets (and maybe sprinkle a little cheese over if they want some!).

Master these skills:

Cleaning vegetables,  Tasting,  Mixing
Activities

Activities

Why not get a selection of different dried or cooked beans and lentils and try and capture the different colours, textures and shapes with colouring pencils? Or make a rainmaker with an empty, clean lidded crisp tube or milk bottle – pour in some dried beans or lentils, decorate them and seal the lid tightly before shake, shake, shaking!

Kids more interested in science? You can find at-home science fun with veg with our videos from Stefan Gates’ here.

Find loads more free veg-themed crafts here and games here.

Sensory

Sensory

Why not explore beans through touch and sight? There are so many different kinds of beans and lentils. Get a few types that are a good mix in size/shape and colour, dried vs cooked, etc. and see if you can and your child can describe them. What do they look like? What colours, shapes and patterns can you see? What do they remind you of? What do they feel like? Are they rough, smooth, slimy, hard?

Find more sensory ideas, tips and videos here. If you get stuck and need a little help with describing words, we have a selection for you here, too!

Serving

Serving

While the dinner you are serving it with is cooking, ask your child to design a beautiful menu for the table, with special emphasis on “their” bean-packed meal they helped you make!

Find the best ways of involving your own child and their skills and interests on our Roles for Kids page.

Charlotte Stirling-Reed RNutr

Charlotte is one of the UK’s leading baby and child nutritionists, bestselling author of How to Wean Your Baby and founder of SR Nutrition. With a background in NHS and public health nutrition, she shares practical, evidence-based advice to help families feed babies, toddlers and children with confidence.

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