Jamie drizzling honey on top of a fig tart

Share your review and contribute to our community!

Save and access your favourite recipes and products.

Enter the email address associated with your account, and we’ll email you a link to reset your password.

Password Strength

Must contain at least

*Enter your email to receive news and exclusive offers from Jamie Oliver Limited about Jamie's businesses, including books, TV shows, restaurants, products, commercial partners and campaigning activities. By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use . Learn how we collect, use and share your data in our Privacy Policy .

Cart item

Just Added

View bag
kneading dough for bread on wooden table

inspiration

Kneading – bread, pizza and pasta with kids

February 6, 2014 • In Family favourites, Baking, Italian-style

Why not let the children have a go at some of these ideas for making bread, pizza and pasta at home when they’re off school?

There are lots of really straightforward activities to try with kids in the kitchen and they’ll love the idea of rolling up their sleeves and getting a bit messy. Let’s start with some ideas for making homemade bread, pizza and pasta, to introduce the technique of kneading.

Bread and pasta dough recipes will often involve a little bit of kneading, which is a great kitchen skill for young children to practice – helping them to build up their control and muscles, as well as encouraging them to connect with their food by making items from scratch. Kneading is really all about creating texture and developing the gluten in the flour. It can also allow the dough to hold tiny pockets of gas, which will help with rising, in the case of bread, or elasticity, in the case of pasta. Although you can use a mixer with a dough hook or a bread machine, kneading by hand is much more fun! Just remember to set out a floured table or board, and then get the children to use the heels of their hands to flatten and stretch the dough. Dough containing yeast should then be left to rise or prove, whilst pasta can be wrapped in clingfilm and left to rest for a little while.

999_2_1384434229_lrg.jpg

If you are new to bread making, it’s probably best to start with a recipe that requires a little kneading. Soda bread is very quick and rewarding to make. Or try a batch of easy flatbreads, which can be rustled up in no time using just four ingredients; flour, salt, baking powder and plain yoghurt. Once made the bread is ideal for mopping up homemade vegetable soup or healthy dips. Once everyone’s mastered the very basic recipes, move onto something simple using yeast. Pizza dough is a great place to start, because the children can get lots of kneading practice in and enjoy creating their pizza with different toppings. Next, move onto a basic bread recipe to build up those kneading skills. Then, try using your bread to make simple eggy bread for breakfast.

998_2_1384434193_lrg.jpg

Homemade egg pasta dough is also very straightforward to make, and will help the kids to really get those kneading skills down to a tee. The dough is made with eggs and ‘00’ Italian pasta flour. When it comes to making pasta dough, Jamie’s advice is to “bash the dough about a bit with your hands, squashing it into the table, reshaping it, pulling it, stretching it, squashing it again.” What could be more fun for the kids?!

You can also watch this video together on Perfect Pasta Dough with Gennaro, who adds a little semolina to his pasta dough and offers some more advice on kneading technique. To go with pasta, children like simple sauces the best and a really good sauce to get the kids involved in making is a basil pesto. The kids can pretty much make the whole recipe themselves using a pestle and mortar to bash up some garlic, with a pinch of salt, adding in basil leaves and pine nuts until they have a thick paste. A drizzle of olive oil and some freshly grated Parmesan will finish their homemade pesto off nicely.

Why not let the children have a go at some of these ideas for making bread, pizza and pasta at home when they’re off? Let me know how you get on.