When you can’t in good conscience serve french fries yet again, or when you seemingly can’t crack the code on getting your kiddo to eat this-or-that vegetable, I have two words for you: carrot fries. Carrots. In fry form. Think about it: in stick form they’re thin like french fries; they’re naturally sweet; and, yes, they look like sweet potato fries. Carrot fries.

Now, life–and especially raising small children–is never as simple as putting something in fry form, so we’ve taken a few steps to make your child want to eat carrots. Garlic butter would probably help, right? In there. Making the fries both crispy and creamy? Yeah, we did that. And the best part, at least for you: they are incredibly easy to make. So you can keep on making them until your child likes them. (Took the author six tries himself.)

Check out our other great toddler vegetable recipes! Looking for a great french fry recipe for kids? We’ve got the best air fryer french fries!

🧄 Flavor That Wins Over Kids (and Adults)

Let’s be real: life—and especially parenting—is rarely as simple as “just put it in fry form.” That’s why these carrot fries get the full treatment:

  • Garlic butter for rich, savory flavor
  • A cornstarch coating for the perfect crispy-outside, creamy-inside bite
  • A pop of paprika, parsley, and lime for color and zing

They’re so simple, you can make them over and over… until the little one admits carrots aren’t so bad after all. (It took the author six tries.)


🛒 Ingredients at a Glance

  • Two large carrots (or ~8 baby carrots)
  • Cornstarch
  • Neutral cooking oil (avocado, canola, etc.)
  • Two tablespoons butter
  • Three cloves garlic
  • Chicken broth or stock
  • Paprika
  • Parsley
  • Lime

👩‍🍳 Quick Steps

  1. Prep & Cut – Slice carrots into thin sticks.
  2. Coat – Toss with cornstarch and a drizzle of oil.
  3. Bake – Roast until tender-crisp, flipping once for even browning.
  4. Flavor Boost – In a small pan, melt butter with minced garlic, a splash of broth, and paprika. Toss roasted carrots in the garlic butter.
  5. Finish – Sprinkle with parsley and a squeeze of lime before serving.

Prep Time 5 mins Cook Time 10 mins Total Time 15 mins Difficulty: Beginner Servings: 4

Description

Crunchy and sweet, this air fryer fries recipe (finally) makes carrots fun to eat.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

Instructions

Prep

  1. Peel and dice the garlic cloves until finely minced. Chop your butter into two pieces.

  2. If using whole carrots, clean and peel and run them through a french fry/potato slicer to get them in stick form; alternatively, you can cut the carrots into form yourself. If using baby carrots, slice any thick pieces in half lengthwise.
  3. In a small bowl, sprinkle cornstarch all over the carrot slices, then drizzle with oil; toss carrot slices until all are coated in oil.

Cook

  1. Using an air fryer, cook the carrots at 400 for 12 minutes, stopping heating at roughly 8 minutes to turn the carrot pieces over.
  2. While carrots cook, heat a small pan to Medium. Place a small amount of oil in the pan and swirl it around to ensure the base of the pan is coated.
  3. When the pan is hot, throw in chopped garlic and cook until it begins to brown, roughly 15-20 seconds. Add a splash of chicken broth and allow it to sizzle and reduce down for about 15 seconds.
  4. Add butter one piece at a time, swirling and mixing the piece until it melts; pull the pan from heat as soon as all the butter is melted.
  5. Sprinkle in paprika and parsley; mix to integrate. Squeeze lime all around the pan and mix together.
  6. Pour sauce over fries.

Serve

  1. When you first serve this, go light on the sauce: wait and see how your child responds to the initial serving before dousing the rest (or not including altogether). If your child is skeptical and/or reticent when these are put before him or her, be honest about what they are but also encouraging and enthusiastic (because they taste really good)–for instance, we call them “surprise fries” in our house. Also: these can serve as a side dish for pretty much anything–burgers and sandwiches, pasta, a hunk of meat or fish–so keep putting them on the table until it clicks (or your child relents).

Adapt

  1. The same technique, with a few tweaks, can be applied to broccoli, too. Cut the stalks off, then boil the broccoli florets until slightly soft, about 1-2 minutes; cool until room temperature. With a flattener/tenderizer, spatula, or a strong palm, flatten the broccoli until it lays pretty flat; toss broccoli in oil and cornstarch, just like you did with the carrots. (I recommend adding grated parmesan to the mix, too.) Heat at 425 for 20 minutes, flipping halfway through the cook. 

Nutrition Facts

Servings 4


Amount Per Serving
Calories 75kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 4g7%
Potassium 350mg10%
Total Carbohydrate 6g2%
Dietary Fiber 1.5g6%
Protein 1g2%

Vitamin A 3300 IU
Vitamin K 15 mcg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Keywords: vegetable recipes for kids, vegetables for kids, healthy meals for picky eaters, toddler dinner ideas, healthy toddler dinners, recipes for toddlers, kid-friendly recipes, easy toddler recipes, easy family meals, toddler-friendly meals
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pinit
The recipe author and his then-infant son
Brad

Brad (the Dad) is the founder and Chief Recipe Officer of New Dad's Kitchen. His own cooking/feeding journey started humbly during his son's infancy, preparing and managing his son's bottle intake in order to support his wife; it has since blossomed into a full-on passion to feed his child and family delicious and healthy meals that can satisfy both a toddler and his very tired parents.

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  1. Holden
    Recommends this recipe

    We loved these–and I don’t even like carrots. (My kid ate some too!)

Min
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