Aiming to include a source of protein at each meal (breakfast, lunch, dinner and ideally at snacks) is a good way to ensure they are getting enough without worrying about counting grams of protein.
To give you an idea of how much protein there is in common foods here is just some of the options:
Many parents are worried when their child doesn’t eat meat or not much meat, this isn’t an issue as there are many meat-free protein options! Some tips for offering non-meat protein options at meals include:
Eggs: on toast in the morning, or scrambled through fried rice.
Dairy foods: (milk, yoghurt, cheese): incorporate at snack times like cheese and wholegrain crackers, or yoghurt and milk in a smoothie with fruit.
Legumes / beans: in a lentil bolognaise sauce, use legume pasta instead of wheat, mashed bean dip, hummus, black bean meatballs, baked into falafels.
Tofu: offer tofu fingers, or in a stir-fry.
Nuts and seeds: nut butter on toast or wholegrain crackers, add seeds into muffin recipes or try chia pudding.