Mud Kitchens - Top tips and ideas (2024)

A mud kitchen is a great way to get children outdoors and playing amongst nature in the most creative way. Whether building, baking, mixing, painting or potion making, the activities offered by a mud kitchen are limited only by the imagination!

Delve into messy play

Learning should be full of magical, memorable experiences. A mud kitchen in the heart of your setting provides children with a wonderful array of learning opportunities. From encouraging creativity and influencing language development, to supporting STEM learning, messy play has educational relevanceacross age groups and curriculum areas.Children will love to mix, mash, blend and sieve materials, whilst developing mathematical, scientific and communication skills.

Early STEM

With your Mud Kitchen you can learn about:

  • Changes
  • Properties
  • Textures
  • Volume
  • Materials
  • Capacity
  • Measurement
  • Senses

Develop mathematical literacy: Encourage children to measure, compare, sort and sequence. Use the language of size, shape and weight, which ones are heavy and which are light?

Mud Kitchenscome in a huge variety of shapes and sizes; they can be sturdy, quality made and built to last, or constructed from second-hand hand wooden palettes, perhaps by a keen parent or caretaker. We’ve seen several creative practitioners make them from stacked milk bottle crates. It is safe to say that however they are acquired or built, mud kitchens have become an essential and valuable piece of outdoor equipment.

TTS mud kitchens are robust, designed for permanent outdoor use, and are the perfect height for small children. We have a wide range of different sized, versatile kitchens and various exciting accessories, so you’re sure to find the ideal items for your needs.

Here are some of our best mud kitchens and inspirational ideas to help in your setting

The benefits of a mud kitchen

Outdoor investigation brings endless, rich learning opportunities in a way that cannot be recreated indoors. Encourage children to pound, splash, squish, squelch, mash and mix their way through all the ingredients nature has to offer. Children will be developing mathematical literacy, enhancing communication skills and be provided with all kinds of collaborative opportunities. High-quality mud kitchens don’t have to cost the earth; we have a range of smaller, budget friendly kitchens that are also ideal for small spaces.

Making the most of your mud kitchen

  • Include an array of ingredients and tools to facilitate investigation and scientific exploration.
  • Get children outdoors whatever the weather – rain, snow or sun – just ensure they are dressed appropriately.
  • Winter is a wonderful season and snow and ice make perfect ingredients to explore. Don’t worry if you don’t have real snow –Instant Snow along with frozen ice cubes make excellent substitutes.
  • Ice cream tubs make great containers for freezing small world figures, such as Arctic animals, or natural items, such as pine cones, leaves and shells. Turn out the frozen ice blocks for children to explore and chip away at, discovering elements frozen in time! You could freeze bonesor fossils– an ice age discovery! Or why not freeze numbers and letters.
  • Fill rubber gloves with water, tie the ends and freeze. Add food colouring and bio-glitter for added colour and sparkle! Children could explore cause and effect by squirting them with warm water. Do they melt quicker if the water is warm?

Make a mud pie

Get busy mixing, blending and creating concoctions with this robust wooden unit and accessory kit. Ideal for use as a mud kitchen or for an outdoor home corner. With added shelving underneath and hooks along the top ledge there is plenty of space to store all of your messy play containers, ingredients and utensils. All listed accessories are included and may also be purchased individually.

Mud kitchen accessories, containers and receptacles

Providing a wide range of receptacles in a variety of sizes and textures allows children to self select their own messy play accessories for the task at hand. Children will learn about volume and weight, whilst expanding their knowledge and understanding of capacity.

Let the investigations begin by providing a range of resources such as:

  • potion bottles
  • giant teapots
  • spoons and mashers
  • pots and containers
  • sieves
  • measuring jugs
  • scoops
  • pestle and mortars
  • kettles/water dispensers

Endless learning opportunities

Let children explore the materials that are around them. Experiment mixing ingredients together such as gravel, grass, petals and water. Develop enquiry skills. Observe properties and change. Encourage creativity, mathematical, scientific and communication skills to flourish.

Imagine the vocabulary that can emerge: Soft, squelchy, grainy, sloppy, slippery, wet, dry, hard, smooth, solid, cold, slimy.

Mud kitchen ingredients

Encourage children to find and collect their own ingredients. Providing opportunities to select, sieve, blend, mix and observe.

Why not have a collection of herbs readily available. Let the children pick them and blend them. The pestle and mortar, mashers and spoons release the perfumes and blend materials together. Add water, stir, shake and sieve. Create imaginative concoctions that ignite the senses.

Some of our favourites include:

  • leaves – dead leaves are great for smashing in the pestle and mortar
  • mud!
  • food colouring
  • instant snow
  • flowers/petals, leaves
  • fruit
  • herbs and spices such as lavender, mint. Ginger and cinnamon are great at Christmas time!
  • aromas
  • pine cones, conkers and acorns
  • water (have a self-dispensing water kettle or butt or jugs for children to help themselves)
  • Ice and snow, frozen blocks with hidden elements to discover
  • jelly
  • rice and grains
  • dried pasta shapes
  • vegetables and peels
  • Gravel
  • Moss
  • Bark
  • Sand
  • Bubble mixture
  • Sticks
  • Shells
  • Bio Glitter, jewels, gems

Rose Petal Perfume

Needed:

  • A container
  • A stirrer
  • Tweezers
  • Curiosity & imaginationCuriosity imagination

Method:

Collect an assortment of petals, leaves and herbs. Mix them together. Add water and observe. Experience a lovely aroma.

Mud Kitchens - Top tips and ideas (2024)

FAQs

Mud Kitchens - Top tips and ideas? ›

As well as messy play some favourite mud kitchen activities include potion making, playing cafes/shops, dinosaur swamps, planting flowers and herbs and much much more. While mud kitchens are suitable for children aged 1 – 8, it is not unusual for older siblings or even Granny to get involved.

What makes a good mud kitchen? ›

A Mud Kitchen Needs Loose Parts

I'm talking about real muffin tins, cookie trays and pots and pans. Using real kitchen tools like colanders, spatulas, and measuring cups makes the play more authentic and saves you the hassle of having to replace pieces and parts that are not durable enough for mud kitchen playtime.

How can I improve my mud kitchen? ›

Mud kitchen games and ideas
  1. Make a Mud Kitchen Cafe. ...
  2. Set up an Outdoor Shop. ...
  3. Make Herbal Tea A firm favourite for our kids is to collect petals and herbs that are growing in the garden and infuse them with hot water to make tea.
  4. Use Real Ingredients – it's a great way to use up old food and.

What are the rules for a mud kitchen? ›

Like all interest areas, mud kitchens have some ground rules. In addition to the basics—share, be kind, take turns—a mud kitchen adds: “mud is not for throwing” and “do not eat mud.” The rules should be kept to a minimum and need to be explained before opening the kitchen.

What plants are good for a mud kitchen? ›

Herbs such as rosemary and thyme can be a great sensory addition to a mud kitchen, as well as dried flowers. Always put allergies into account. ⭐ Learning experience; Ask children to discuss the properties of the herbs and flowers.

What is the best mud for a mud kitchen? ›

The best (and – weirdly – cleanest) kind of mud you can buy for a mud kitchen is topsoil – it's the closest to 'garden dirt' and has got the best texture for mixing – it makes extremely satisfying muddy gloop!

What is the best sand for a mud kitchen? ›

You can buy mud and sand from DIY or hardware stores; topsoil (or loam soil) is best. Compost works but you'll find it's a little clumpy and doesn't achieve a smooth 'muddy' consistency. Sharp or soft sand can be used for different effects.

Is 5 too old for a mud kitchen? ›

Mud Kitchens are a great resource for children aged 1 to 7 years. However, older children are likely to enjoy playing with it too!

What can I use for a sink in a mud kitchen? ›

There are so many options for a sink in your mud kitchen!! You could use a real kitchen sink, stainless steel, glass, porcelain, sinks that drain and sinks that don't. You could use a small RV sink, you can use storage bins.

Are mud kitchens worth it? ›

Enhancing Literacy Skills – Mud kitchens can encourage literacy. Children often enact real-world roles and dialogues, strengthening vocabulary and comprehension skills. Promoting Creativity – Mud Kitchens opens a world of creativity, as children have free rein to explore and invent.

What are the risks of a mud kitchen? ›

The mud kitchen can take up space that children usually use to play freely in. Pots and pans filled with mud can be heavy and children may injure themselves if they are dropped on hands and feet. Children can crowd the space and cause injury. Water can spill on clothes and make children cold.

What age should you buy a mud kitchen? ›

Primary School Children (Age 5-8)

Primary school children, particularly the younger children in Key Stage 1 will love playing in a mud kitchen. And don't be surprised if the older children (even 9-11 year olds) find themselves enjoying mud play. It certainly doesn't have an age limit!

How tall should a mud kitchen be? ›

We found that making the table a little over 2 feet tall was the perfect height to allow little kids and big kids to play. The back wall of the mud kitchen extends up another 22 inches. We wanted the boards, on the back wall, to have some space but not too much, so we space them an inch apart using one inch spacers.

Do you use mud in a mud kitchen? ›

Mud kitchens work well all year round, and need to be seen as a core element of continuous provision outside. The kitchen needs a handy and ample supply of the basic materials of sand and/or mud.

What is the best plant for a kitchen? ›

The Best Kitchen Plants
  • Snake Plant Futura Superba (Medium) Buy the air-purifying, easy to care snake plant. ...
  • ZZ Green (Medium) Gift this resilient and low maintenance beauty that is a is a great air purifier. ...
  • Lucky Bamboo Plant. ...
  • Pachira Money Tree (X-Large) ...
  • Spider Plant Variegated (Medium)

What vegetables are soil builders? ›

Heavy-feeding plants are intermixed with crops that add nitrogen to the soil. As an example, peas and beans benefit potatoes, carrots, cucumbers, cauliflower, cabbage, summer savory, turnips, radishes, corn, and most other herbs and vegetables.

How do you make the perfect mud? ›

Mix the cement and the sand together until they're well blended. Different people will recommend different ratios for mixing (4:1, 5:1, 6:1, and 7:1), but a ratio of 5 parts sand to 1 part cement is the best starting option. "Stickier", stronger mud should be made using the 4:1 ratio, but this is difficult to mix.

Are mud kitchens a good idea? ›

The open-ended nature of mud play encourages creative thinking and allows children to freely create without fear of making mistakes, contributing to a child's sense of self, and helping to build confidence. Not to mention the huge health benefits of immune boosting dirt!

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