Finding Cookie Cutters for Kids

Kids love to help you bake. They also love it when you make their food in fun shapes. One way to make fun-shaped food is by using cookie cutters. Finding kid-friendly cookie cutters is easy.

  1. Check Your Local Stores

    • Your first stop when looking for cookie cutters for kids should be the local crafts store. Around holidays, you'll run across all sorts of different cookie cutter shapes that are related to that holiday. Plastic cookie cutters are best if you plan on letting the kids use them. And what's more, the holiday cookie cutters are usually pretty cheap.
      Also, check the baking aisle in your supermarket, or your local kitchen supply store.

    Find Cookie Cutters Online

    • If you're looking for unusual shapes or designs (or just aren't having luck locally), look on-line for cookie cutters. There are quite a few websites dedicated to selling cookie cutters. You can get anything from traditional shapes to very unusual or specialized cookie cutters.

      You can make a wide variety of cookies and have your kids decorate them for special occasions, or just provide an afternoon's entertainment. You can also use the cookie cutters to make shapes with Jell-O or biscuits.
      You can also use special cookie cutters to shape kids' sandwiches. This could be just the trick to get that picky eater to try something new.

    • When you’re planning your toddlers meals, you probably pay close attention to the big three: fat, calories and sugar. But you should also consider dietary fiber — and not just because it will help keep your little one regular.In children
    • While the battle may seem to be without reason, a picky and independent toddler can make misery out of the midday meal. If your toddler is currently on a lunch-time strike against everything but macaroni, you might be worried about the lack of balanc
    • “Taste training” is about learning healthy eating as a life skill. The term has been gaining in popularity, but it is far from a new trend for parents seeking to teach their kids to enjoy healthy foods. Taste training is rooted in tried