Have you ever tried cooking dinner or doing the dishes while your toddler clings to your leg like a koala?
I tested this calming sensory bin for toddlers right in the middle of cooking — and it kept my 28-month-old happily busy for over an hour with surprisingly little mess.
Before we dive in, tell me: where does your toddler usually hang out while you cook — kitchen floor, learning tower, or glued to you?

🎯 Chia Seed Valentine’s Sensory Bin Setup (Low Prep, Low Mess)
- Chia seeds
- Warm water
- A tiny drop of red food coloring
- 1 spoon of starch (cornstarch works)
- Clear food container
- Large tray or a bigger second container lid (for mess control)
- Ladles, spoons, empty yogurt cups
- Manual hand mixer
- Tongs
- Optional: Valentine hearts, glowing stars, toy animals
- Optional scent: a sprinkle of vanilla

💡 Tip: Everything here is non-toxic and edible, which made this activity feel very low-stress for me.
Optional swaps:
- Skip small parts for under-1s
- Use plain chia seeds (no color)
- Add water only for a simpler sensory version
🛠️ How to Set Up (Under 5 Minutes)
- Pour chia seeds into the clear container.
- Add warm water and a tiny drop of food coloring.

- Stir in one spoon of starch and add the plastic hearts.
- I added a sprinkle of vanilla, and he loved the smell too.
- Let it thicken for a minute (it gets magically gel-like).
- Place the container inside a larger tray or box for mess control.
- Add tools and it’s go time.
PS.: Check what we did with the chia seeds afterwards below. I didn’t want to waste the food. Which is often the case with sensory food play.
💡 I prepped this with my toddler together and started on lunch after the prep — He needed a bit of help and attention sometimes, but mostly he played alone. Real life.
🎯 How to Play / Do the Activity
Once everything was ready, my son immediately leaned in — curious, focused, and very serious about his “work.” At first, he used his hands to feel the chia seeds (he usually dislikes “dirty” textures, so this was huge). I kept a towel nearby, but he surprised me by going back to touch it again.

He got really into playing:
- Pouring from cup to cup
- Scooping with ladles
- Mixing like he was baking a cake
- Carefully trying the tongs on the hearts (harder than it looks — I tried too!)

He played with the hearts, added glowing stars by request, and later decided the dinosaurs needed to be fed cake. At the end, he even asked for water to wash the hearts — which despite my worries didn’t escalate into a messy kitchen.
Quick question for you: does your toddler prefer pouring, scooping, or mixing most?
🧠 What They’re Learning Here

- Fine motor skills (scooping, tong use)
- Hand-eye coordination
- Sensory exploration (texture + smell)
- Focus & patience
- Cause and effect
- Early practical life skills (mixing, cleaning)

Sensory play like this naturally supports brain development — especially when children choose how to engage.
📌 My Honest Thoughts / Personal Experience
This worked even better than I expected.
- He stayed engaged for over an hour – I had to actually interrupt
- I cooked and did dishes with him happily beside me
- The clear container + learning tower kept mess minimal
- Setup took less than 5 minutes
- Cleanup was easy
The best part? We reused the chia seeds.
After playtime, we planted them in old food containers. I hate food waste, and turning play into a mini gardening experiment felt like a win. I’ll keep you posted on whether they sprout 🌱

Even my mum — who stopped by — couldn’t resist scooping some chia gel. That texture is weirdly satisfying, not gonna lie.
📍 FAQ / Tips
Q: What age is this good for?
A: From around 9–12 months (skip small parts) up to preschool age.
Q: Is it really low mess?
A: Yes — using a large tray and learning tower made all the difference.
Q: Can this calm overstimulated toddlers?
A: Absolutely. The slow movements and repetitive pouring were very regulating.
🔗 Related Resources
Related:
👉 Sensory Bin Ideas for Toddlers
👉 Sensory Bins for Babies Under One
👉 Sensory Bins with Household Items (Tiny Budget)
And of course Valentine’s Crafts
💬 Your Turn! Try It & Tag Me
If you try this calming sensory bin, I’d love to see it.
Tag me or share inside the community — especially if you’re cooking dinner while your toddler “bakes” next to you. I am on insta, fb, tiktok #mommyscrafttime. 🙂
✨ Want more low-prep, real-life toddler activities that actually work?
👉 Join my Skool community for deeper sensory play ideas, routines, and real mum support. OR
👉 Grab my bimonthly activity magazine with seasonal ideas, printables, and behind-the-scenes tips.
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