people are absolutely EVIL about the boundaries of “picky eaters”. no, they do not have to try it. yes, they can know they don’t like it without having eaten it before. no, they probably have not suddenly grown a taste for the food they’ve said they hate. no, they probably are not going to like it in the Special Way This One Place Cooks It. yes, you are being a bad friend if you try to “trick” them into eating it anyway
Things that actually help picky eaters try new things:
- “Do you want to try this off of my plate?”
- “It’s made of [ingredients], I think you’d like [x part]”
- “If you want to see if you like [x food], this is a pretty good representation of it”
- “You won’t like this, it tastes like [description]. Do you want to try it for fun?”
- “Do you remember trying/have you ever tried [x food]? This is like that, but [differences]”
- “I think you’d like the taste of this, but the texture is iffy. It’s [description]”
- Make sure there’s other food they can eat if they don’t like the new one
And most importantly, build trust with that person by listening to them, showing that you take their concerns into account, and being cool if the answer is no. No is always an option. This isn’t something you do once, it’s a pattern you have to stick to if you want to establish that you are a safe person when it comes to food stuff
Basically: offer the food, explain what’s in it and why you think it’s worth trying, and then be cool with the answer you get. No pressure, no trickery, just be straight up with people