Make a Guacamole kit (perishable & seasonal) – Send Organic Avocadoes grown in the USA, limes, salt, onions and chiles (if applicable – we make Guacamole with no chiles and adults or older kids with experience should really only handle them). Send a lava bowl and pestle to mash them in or a nice fork – and a bag of organic corn tortilla chips. Local Harvest has Reed Avocadoes available to ship. Que Pasa's are our organic chips of choice at the moment.
Make a recipe box: Take some of your favorite recipes and make them little-chef friendly printing them clearly and making the steps simple. Add a photo if you have one (a digital camera and a color printer will work). If there's a story, add it on the reverse side of the card. You can provide a little recipe box to go along with it, with blank recipe cards and room for more! You can even buy a plain box and decorate it or paint it! Or you can buy a pre-built box and add some custom recipes like the A-to-Z recipe box.
Find a cooking school in the child’s community which has classes for kids and send a gift certificate for a class or make them a reservation. Some town/city recreation departments offer cooking classes for kids. Some of the cooking store chains like Sur La Table offer classes for kids (often seasonal).
If you sew, make an apron and embroider the child’s name or sew on a fabric square with the name printed on it. If you quilt, make up some hot pads or a special placemat!
If you don’t sew or bake, assemble some great pint-sized cooking items like small tongs, small measuring cups or spoons, mixing bowl, baking pan and package in a tray or box which they could easily be stored in.
For a special little chef, consider a special children's Chef Knife and cutting board (to be used under adult supervision, of course). A small cutting board from Epicurean is what Trent uses. Korin offers a Misono blunt ended little chef's knife that Trent has had for a few years. New this year is a less-expensive kid's kitchen lines from KuhnRikon called Kinderkitchen which included both straight edge and serrated knives with animal figure handles.


Build a better lunchbox. Either a BPA-free one like the ones from Crocodile Creek or a little laptop style or a Bento box jar style. A new water bottle with a custom made label or design like one from Sigg might elicit a smile. I like the Oots lunch idea too! Add a bamboo fork or spoon, some fancy chopsticks, or a lovely set of cloth napkins, for a fun flourish!

A Learning Tower! If you have room, this is the one standby in our kitchen. Our son has used it for 5 years almost daily! They now come in colors and a variety of finishes. They are made of real wood, adjustable and hold two kids.
If you don't have time to make your own: Send a Pre-made kit. Most kits have simple instructions which translate well for kids. Baker’s Catalog offers ones that I’ve sent – but beware preset kits often hide PHOs or HFC, if that’s a concern.