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Finding Joy in Your Home

How We Built a Simple Food System That Taught Our Kids Real Skills (and Took Pressure Off Me) - BLOG

Finding Joy in Your Home

Jami Balmet

Kids & Family, Religion & Spirituality, Christianity

4.8655 Ratings

🗓️ 16 January 2026

⏱️ 6 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We've started a new system in our home the last couple of years and it's been one of those changes that quietly ends up touching everything.

It's not flashy.
It's not complicated.
But it's steady, practical, and surprisingly life-giving.

Each of our kids is now trained on one special food that they're fully responsible for making each week.

They are not helping me make it.
They are not reminding me to get around to it.
They make it.

Here's what that looks like in our house right now:

  • Malachi (13) makes 2 gallons of kombucha each week
    Micah (13) makes a huge batch of crockpot granola
    Remington (10) makes 1–2 gallons of yogurt each week
    Ryder (10) makes 1–2 sandwich loaves in the breadmaker
    Magnolia (almost 9) keeps us stocked with muffins, brownies, cookies, and other healthy treats that supplement meals
    Mom (36) makes ½ gallon of kefir daily and is slowly working toward a full gallon

It's become this beautiful rhythm where food is coming from many hands instead of just one  and everyone feels invested in what they're making.

But this didn't start as some grand household system or perfectly thought-out plan.

It started with kombucha.

The Lightbulb Moment

Malachi kept begging me every week to make a fresh batch of kombucha.

The problem was… kombucha can easily sit and ferment away, and with everything else going on in our house, I was usually only getting to it every couple of weeks. He loved it so much and honestly, it's so good for you that I wanted the whole family drinking it more consistently.

One day it finally clicked.

This kid was highly motivated to drink it. He had already helped me make it plenty of times. He understood the process.

So I turned to him and said,
"What if I train you how to make it completely by yourself? Then you can just make it every week and it doesn't depend on me."

His face lit up. He thought that was a brilliant idea. So we trained together. I slowly stepped back. And before long, he owned it.

The very next day, Micah wandered in asking when we were going to make more granola.

And I had another lightbulb moment.

BOOM. Now he has a weekly task too and he's thrilled because granola magically appears whenever he wants it. Once that door opened, it just kept unfolding naturally.

Why This System Has Worked So Well for Our Family

1. Motivation is built in.

Each child is responsible for something they genuinely love to eat.

They're not being assigned random chores that feel disconnected from their life (although they are assigned plenty of those as well)! They're contributing in a way that directly blesses them and the whole family.

Ownership changes everything.

When kids care about the outcome, they're willing to practice, troubleshoot, and keep improving.

2. Training once saves energy forever.

Yes — training takes time upfront.

There are messes.
There are mistakes.
There are moments where it would absolutely be faster to just do it yourself.

But once the skill is learned, it multiplies.

Instead of me personally making all of these foods week after week for years, the responsibility now lives in the household.

That's not just helpful today. That's shaping capable adults.

3. It supports how we actually eat.

We eat a lot of simple, from-scratch foods. My daily focus is often on getting beans cooking, managing dinner in the Instant Pot, and keeping the core meals moving forward.

We love having things like granola, yogurt, bread, kombucha, and baked treats, but realistically, I couldn't keep up with making all of it myself every single week.

This system allows everyone to enjoy the foods they love without piling more work onto one person.

It's truly a win-win-win:

  • The kids get ownership and pride in their work.
  • Our home stays well-fed with nourishing food.
  • My mental and physical workload is lighter.

4. Skills compound faster than you expect.

Once kids learn how to measure, follow steps, manage time, clean up after themselves, and problem-solve when something doesn't turn out quite right,  everything else becomes easier to teach. And in turn, the siblings can then teach eachother!

Cooking stops feeling intimidating and starts feeling familiar.

Confidence grows quietly, one batch at a time.

What Training Actually Looks Like in Real Life

Training isn't formal lessons or rigid systems in our house.

It looks like:

  • Cooking alongside them at first
  • Talking through each step
  • Explaining why we do things a certain way
  • Letting them try
  • Letting them mess up
  • Slowly stepping back

At first I'm very hands-on. Then I'm coaching from the side. Eventually, I'm just nearby if questions pop up. And then one day you realize… they've got it.

If This Feels Intimidating — You're Not Alone

If the idea of teaching your kids to cook feels overwhelming, I understand that deeply.

Many of us didn't grow up learning these skills ourselves. We're figuring it out as we go. Sometimes the kitchen already feels like survival mode.

So start small. It might be just one food, one child, one new skill! Let confidence build naturally. You don't need perfection, you need consistency and patience.

Why This Matters Beyond Food

This isn't really about kombucha or bread or muffins.

It's about:

  • Raising capable kids
  • Sharing responsibility inside the home
  • Teaching stewardship
  • Building rhythms that support family life instead of draining it
  • Giving children meaningful ways to contribute

These small systems shape a household culture over time.

If you've ever wished your kids could help more in the kitchen, this is your invitation to start.

Small steps.
Real skills.
Big payoff over time.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello and welcome back to the Finding Joy in Your Home podcast feed. I am back today with another blog.

0:06.6

If you're new around here, I have been back to blogging every single week, multiple times a week actually, which has been really fun.

0:14.3

And I have been recording each blog post here as a mini podcast episode. So let's go ahead and jump in. How We Build a Simple Food System

0:24.7

that taught our kids real skills and took pressure off of me. We've started a new system in our

0:31.7

home the past couple of years, and it's been one of those changes that quietly ends up

0:36.2

touching everything. It's not flashy, it's not complicated of those changes that quietly ends up touching everything.

0:38.7

It's not flashy.

0:39.9

It's not complicated.

0:43.4

Just steady, practical, and surprisingly life-giving.

0:49.0

Each of our kids is now trained on one special food that they're fully responsible for making each week.

0:50.7

Not helping to make it.

0:53.6

Not them reminding me to get around to it. They make it. So here's what it looks

0:56.7

like in our house right now. Malachi, age 13, makes two gallons of kombucha each week, which he started

1:02.4

when he was 11. Micah, age 13, makes a huge batch of crockpot granola. Rumbington, age 10,

1:09.1

makes one to two gallons of yogurt each week. Rider, age 10, makes one to two gallons of yogurt each week. Riter, age 10,

1:12.8

makes one to two sandwich loaves in the breadmaker. Magnollia, almost nine, keeps us stocked with

1:17.9

muffins, brownies, cookies, and other healthy treats that supplement meals. Mom, age 36, makes

1:23.9

one half a gallon of keifer a day and is slowly working towards a full gallon a day.

1:29.6

It's become this beautiful rhythm where food is coming from many hands instead of just one,

1:34.5

and everyone feels invested in what they're making. But this didn't start as some grand household

1:39.4

system or perfectly thought out plan. It started with kombucha. The light bulb moment. Malachi kept

1:46.9

begging me every week to make a fresh batch of kombucha. The problem was, kombucha can easily sit and

...

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