Family Meal Success: Fun with Meal Boards

Here's a fun way to engage everyone at your next family meal: make a board!This easy-to-make dinner includes any fresh veggies that can be used as dippers along with some air-fried treats like chicken fingers and oven French fries. Add a few dips and some fruit and you've got an award-winning board!Now everyone can make their own plate from a selection of healthful foods. Plus, the board turns the meal into the focus of the table.Here's How to Make Your Own Board:Find a large, clean cutting board or cookie tray.Fill it with finger foods.Protein:

  • nuts

  • nut butter

  • hard-boiled eggs

  • air-fried chicken strips

  • grilled chicken

Veggies, fresh, air-fried, or grilled:

  • carrot sticks

  • fresh cucumber sticks

  • celery

  • grape tomatoes

  • cut radishes

  • broccoli florets

  • cauliflower florets

  • air-fried French fries (we used sweet potatoes and regular potatoes)

Fruit:

  • grapes

  • berries

  • apple or pear slices

  • chunks of melon

Dips:

  • hummus

  • ketchup

  • dressings like honey mustard or ranch

  • yogurt

  • vinaigrette

It's easy to customize your own meal board!Best of all, these items can be made ahead of time and assembled at the last minute. The leftovers make great stuffers for lunch boxes or other meals.Here's the recipe for the meal board shown. Feel free to download or print as a handout! Change it up to make it your own!

Meal Board - Family Meal Time

This fun meal contains actually all the healthy food groups as finger foods on a meal board. Easy to make, fun to present, and delicious to eat!

  • Air Fryer

  • large cutting board

  • 3 each chicken breasts (skinless, boneless, cut into finger-sized strips)

  • 1/2 cup flour (all purpose)

  • 1 each egg (beaten)

  • 1 cup panko bread crumbs (place in bowl)

  • 3 each potatoes (Idaho baking potatoes, rinsed, cut in wedges)

  • 1 each red yams (cut in sticks)

  • 1/2 pound carrots (peeled and cut in sticks)

  • 1 cup grape or cherry tomatoes (whole but stem removed)

  • 1 each cucumber (cut in sticks)

  • 1 head broccoli (florets)

  • 2 cups red seedless grapes (rinsed)

  • 2 cups radishes (rinse and trim; cut in half)

  • 1 each olive oil spray (1 second of spray)

  • 1 tsp garlic pepper seasoning (or something similar)

  • 1/4 cup ketchup

  • 1/4 cup Ranch dressing

  • 1/4 cup vinaigrette dressing

  1. Cut all of the veggies and place in a pan or in bags in the refrigerator until ready to serve. Rinse the grapes and keep in bowl in refrigerator until ready to serve.

  2. Get the items ready for the air fryer. Cut the potatoes, spray with olive oil. Cook on Air Fry Mode at 400 degrees F for 20 minutes or until done in an Air Fryer. You can also bake them in the oven for 20 minutes at 425 degrees. Set aside.

  3. Meanwhile, bread the chicken fingers. Dredge them in flour then the beaten egg then the Panko bread crumbs. Spray with olive oil. Air fry for 20 minutes at 400 degrees in air fryer or oven until crispy. Season with garlic pepper.

  4. Arrange everything with the dips on the meal board and serve.

Main Course, Family Meal, Dinner

American

Judy Doherty, MPS, PCII

Judy Doherty, MPS, PCII discovered her love of cooking at her grandmother's side, stirring raisin oatmeal on a Saturday morning. By 15 she had her first food service job. At 18 she was accepted to the Culinary Institute of America, where she graduated second in her class, then went on to the Fachschule Richemont in Switzerland to study pastry arts and baking. A decade with Hyatt Hotels followed before she founded Food and Health Communications with a single conviction: food that is good for you should taste extraordinary.

Judy holds a Master of Professional Studies in Food Business from the Culinary Institute of America, a Bachelor of Science in Culinary Arts from Johnson and Wales University (Summa Cum Laude), two art certificates from UC Berkeley Extension, and the CIA's Pro Chef II certification. She has earned the American Culinary Federation Bronze Medal, Gold Medal, and ACF Chef of the Year award.

Today she develops every recipe on this site, shoots and styles food through her food photography and motion studio, and publishes nutrition education materials for dietitians, schools, extension offices, and health professionals through nutritioneducationstore.com. She uses the latest nutritional science and Dietary Guidelines to drive her creativity — whether that means a new twist on fajitas or Italian brownies made with toasted nuts and cooked honey. Her mission has never changed: help everyone make food that tastes as good as it is for them.

https://nutritioneducationstore.com
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