Parents and children walking together, representing Grate Adventures' mission to guide families through feeding challenges.

Helping parents of neurodivergent children reduce mealtime stress and expand food variety.

Helping neurodivergent children with autism, ADHD, and restrictive eating feel confident around food by supporting parents with practical, dietitian-led feeding guidance.

If mealtimes are filled with anxiety, sensory overwhelm, or nutrition worries, you are not alone. I help families to feel confident feeding their child.

If you are looking for simple steps that make a real difference, this is where to begin.

I went from feeling helpless watching meals go untouched to creating mealtimes where kids explore food willingly.

kristy jordan

dietitian & feeding therapist

Hi, I'm Kristy!

I know how exhausting and disheartening mealtimes can feel, especially when your child is autistic and food feels like a daily battle. I’ve seen the stress, the worry, and the frustration when every strategy seems to fall short.

Through years of working alongside families as a feeding therapist, I’ve learned how to create a mealtime environment that encourages eating. My approach helps children feel safe exploring food at their own pace, while giving parents the tools and confidence to support them without pressure.

I’ve walked with many families of autistic children as they’ve rebuilt trust at the table, celebrated progress, and rediscovered joy in mealtimes - and I’d love to help you do the same.

Hi, I'm Kristy - dietitian and feeding therapist helping parents support their child with food challenges.

Support your child’s health and development by making achievable progress with food today

Deconstructed Dinners Challenge by Grate Adventures, teaching parents how to make meals simple, fun and stress free.

Are you worried about your child's nutrition?

A free, printable workbook for parents

How many times have you wanted to feel confident about your child’s nutrition, but felt stuck between worrying too much and avoiding thinking about it altogether?

If your child eats a limited range of foods, it is natural to wonder whether they are getting what they need.

This Nutrition Check-In is designed to help you understand where your child’s intake may already be okay, and where extra support might be helpful.

Ready to build the family meals of your dreams?

Community of parents coming together, representing support and shared learning through Grate Adventures

Join The Community

Get guidance from experts and join a supportive community of parents who understand. Together, we’ll help you create a mealtime environment where your child's needs are being met, and you can relax knowing you are doing everything you can to support them in their journey.

Subscribe to the Grate Adventures newsletter for feeding support, tips, and calm mealtime strategies

Follow Me On Instagram

Get daily tips, inspiration, and behind-the-scenes insights to help you stay motivated and improve your relationship with your child at mealtimes.

Reat the Grate Adventures blog for practical tools, tips, and mealtime support for families.

Subscribe To The Newsletter

Subscribe to the Grate Adventure newsletter for actionable strategies, expert advice, and inspiring stories to help you to learn what changes you can make to help your child, starting today.

Ready to build the life of your dreams?

Let's chat

Ready to work with a coach to uplevel your life and business?

Listen to the

Podcast

view my

services

read the

BLOG

Let's chat

Ready to work with a coach to uplevel your life and business?

Let's learn

Learn at your own pace and make quantum leaps.

Student Love Notes

We've helped so many incredible students to find success as Virtual Assistants...

The VA Business Blueprint helped me to go from feeling completely stuck to starting my business and getting my first client!

Ellen, business name

I enrolled in the VA Services Academy feeling completely lost - within 2 weeks I knew exactly what to offer & what to charge.

Ellen, business name

Beginner to Booked Out was a game-changer for me. Anna and her team are incredible and I'm booked out for the next 3 months!

Ellen, business name

New on the blog...

Food and nutrition supporting sleep in school-aged children

Is What Your Child Eating Affecting Their Sleep?

January 26, 20264 min read

A practical, evidence-informed guide for parents of school-aged children

When sleep becomes a struggle, it’s completely natural for parents to wonder whether food might be part of the problem, or part of the solution.

While nutrition alone cannot “fix” sleep difficulties, what children eat, how much they eat, and when they eat can meaningfully influence sleep quality, overnight regulation, and how settled the body feels at bedtime. This connection is particularly important for school-aged children and for children with neurodivergent nervous systems, where regulation and predictability matter even more.

How Eating and Sleep Are Connected

Sleep is regulated by several overlapping systems:

  • Circadian rhythm (the body clock)

  • Sleep pressure (how tired the body feels)

  • Nervous system regulation

  • Metabolic and hormonal signals

Food intake interacts with all of these systems. Research shows that meal timing, overall energy intake, and carbohydrate availability can influence sleep onset, night waking, and overnight regulation.


Why Skipping or Undereating Can Disrupt Sleep

Children who don’t eat enough across the day, whether due to busy schedules, low appetite, sensory sensitivities, or anxiety, may experience:

  • Difficulty settling at bedtime

  • Early morning waking

  • Restless or fragmented sleep

  • Night-time anxiety or agitation

Undereating can raise stress hormones such as cortisol and reduce overnight blood-glucose stability, both of which signal the body to stay alert rather than rest.


The Role of Evening Food

For school-aged children, an evening meal and/or bedtime snack can support sleep by:

  • Reducing overnight hunger

  • Supporting stable blood-glucose levels

  • Signalling safety and predictability to the nervous system

Research suggests that carbohydrate-containing foods in the evening may support sleep onset by increasing tryptophan availability in the brain - a precursor to melatonin, the sleep hormone. This doesn’t mean sugary foods are required, but rather that balanced, familiar carbohydrates can be helpful.


Protein, Iron, and Sleep Quality

Certain nutrients are often discussed in relation to sleep:

  • Protein – supports neurotransmitter production and overnight repair

  • Iron – low iron is associated with restless sleep and fatigue

  • Zinc – involved in nervous-system regulation

The key message for parents is not to chase nutrients in isolation, but to ensure regular access to a variety of foods across the day, especially for children with restricted intake. Supplements are not a first-line approach and should always be discussed with a health professional who knows your child.


Hydration and Sleep

Mild dehydration can contribute to:

  • Headaches

  • Restlessness

  • Night waking

Supporting hydration earlier in the day, rather than encouraging fluids right before bed, can help children feel more comfortable overnight without increasing night-time toileting.


Why Neurodivergent Children May Be More Sensitive

Neurodivergent children may experience:

  • Reduced interoceptive awareness (not noticing hunger)

  • Sensory sensitivities that limit intake

  • Anxiety that suppresses appetite

  • Higher baseline nervous system arousal

For these children, consistent access to food, especially later in the day, can play a meaningful role in supporting sleep readiness and overnight regulation.


Parent Checklist: Is Nutrition Supporting Your Child’s Sleep?

Daily Intake

  • My child eats regular meals and snacks across the day

  • Long gaps without food are generally avoided

  • My child has access to enough food overall, even if intake varies day to day

Evening Eating

  • My child eats dinner most nights

  • A bedtime snack is offered if dinner is early or intake is low

  • Evening foods feel familiar and safe for my child

Routine & Regulation

  • Evening meals/snacks happen at predictable times

  • Food is not rushed or pressured close to bedtime

  • Eating feels calm rather than stressful

Hydration

  • Fluids are encouraged earlier in the day

  • Night-time thirst is not a regular cause of waking

Sleep Clues

  • My child settles more easily on days they eat better

  • Night waking is worse when intake has been low

  • Hunger or tummy discomfort seems linked to sleep disruption

If several boxes feel difficult to tick, nutrition may be playing a role in your child’s sleep challenges.


When to Seek Extra Support

Consider additional support if:

  • Sleep difficulties are ongoing or worsening

  • Your child’s intake is very limited

  • Night waking is frequent, intense, or distressing

Helpful professionals may include:

  • GP

  • Dietitian

  • Psychologist

  • Regulation-focused occupational therapist

  • Sleep specialists


Sources


Have Questions or Need Support?

If you’re worried about your child’s appetite, nutrition, or mealtime behaviour, please reach out. Every child’s situation is different, especially for those who are neurodivergent, and personalised guidance can make a meaningful difference.

You can get in touch through Grate Adventures to ask a question, book a consultation, or join our Feeding Therapy Community for additional support and practical resources.

food and sleep childrenchild sleep and nutritioneating and sleep regulationsleep problems children foodneurodivergent child sleep
blog author image

Kristy Jordan, APD

Kristy Jordan, APD, is a Feeding Therapist and founder of Grate Adventures. She supports families to rebuild trust, reduce mealtime stress, and find joy in food again through responsive feeding and practical, evidence-based tools.

Back to Blog

The Limitless Potential Podcast

This is a great place to introduce your podcast and let listeners know what it's all about! Get them excited to click through and listen to an episode.

LISTEN ON: