If you’ve ever had to negotiate with a five-year-old over what’s for dinner, you know the battlefield well. It’s a standoff between convenience and curiosity, one side armed with chicken nuggets, the other clutching a recipe that’s a little too “grown-up.”
So when Natasha and Jupiter Salas, the husband-and-wife team behind The Pantry on Magnolia, decided to help kids at Cook Children’s Hospital explore food beyond the beige plate, it felt like a small culinary revolution. The project came together almost by chance. One day, Fort Worth chef Brent Hale, the man behind the Big Sexy Food truck and the pay-what-you-can Taste Project restaurant, dropped by The Pantry for a visit.
Over some discussion, he floated an idea: a kid-friendly food show for Cook Children’s internal network, meant to inspire patients to try new dishes while recovering in the hospital.
“Brent mentioned this show they were creating, something fun and familiar to help kids branch out,” Jupiter recalls. “Next thing we knew, we were filming the pilot episode right here on Magnolia.”
The show, set to air in early November, features the Salas’ in their natural element, cooking, laughing, and transforming childhood classics into approachable versions of their signature dumplings. Natasha, a former teacher turned chef, leaned into the lesson plan.
“The best way to teach is through something familiar,” she says. “So I started with hamburgers, pizza, and peanut butter and jelly.”
Sounds simple enough, but what she created was part genius, part comfort food magic. A pizza dumpling, think Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles meets dim sum, stuffed with pepperoni, cheese, and a side of marinara dipping sauce. A Happy Meal-inspired cheeseburger dumpling, pickles and all, paired with a dill-spiked ketchup for dunking. And for dessert? A peanut butter and grape jelly dumpling, soft and warm, the kind of bite that instantly reminds you of your own lunchbox years.
It’s food that bridges worlds, comforting but curious, playful but crafted. For Natasha, the challenge was in dialing down her usual flair to fit the younger palate.
“As a chef, I always want to add spice or depth or some twist,” she says. “But for kids, you’ve got to start gentle, meet them where they are. Then, once they trust the dish, you can lead them somewhere new.”
The show’s aim mirrors that philosophy. The hospital’s culinary series, designed to air on Cook Children’s closed-circuit network in November, invites local chefs to introduce young viewers to flavors beyond their go-to mac and cheese. By featuring familiar faces from the community, it connects the hospital experience to the outside world in the most comforting way possible: through food.
And The Pantry’s role as the first episode isn’t just symbolic. The restaurant sits just a stone’s throw from the hospital district, a cozy spot where parents visiting Cook’s can easily drop in after catching the show.
“That was the idea,” Jupiter says. “To give families a place nearby where they can try the food they saw on TV, together.”
When the series debuts this November, The Pantry will roll out the same kid-friendly dumplings from the episode— pizza, cheeseburger, and peanut butter & jelly — each tied to the hospital’s launch.
For Natasha and Jupiter, this project isn’t just another notch in their culinary belt. It’s about community, connection, and yes, a little education.
“Parents come in with their kids and sometimes bring fast food along,” Natasha says. “But if we can show them something that feels familiar, a dumpling shaped like a burger, say, maybe that gets a child to try something new. It’s about changing the mindset, not forcing it.”
Even beyond the hospital project, the Salas’ are constantly pushing the boundaries of their menu.
Natasha adds: “Even though we have our staples on the menu, the few things that come in and out that change seasonally, especially our dumplings and our desserts, we’re always kind of trying to figure out a way to just put a little pep in our step.”