Introducing Solid Foods to Your Baby
December 27th, 2010
Once milk alone no longer satisfies your baby you will need to start introducing solid foods into her diet. The recommended age for this is six months, but if your baby seems ready for solids before this you should talk to your health provider or doctor. Your baby will let you know she is still hungry by wanting more after the feed is finished, or she may start chewing her fists. A baby may also begin to demand feeds more often and if she normally sleeps through the night, she may start waking up early wanting to be fed.
Breast and formula milk give babies all they require for the first six months so you don’t have to worry if your baby seems satisfied with milk alone until this age. By six months of age, your baby needs the additional nourishment provided by solids, and she also needs to learn how to eat.
How to Start
First solids are really just tasters to get a baby used to different textures and flavors; the main nourishment will still come from breast or formula milk. The first food should be bland and smooth, like baby rice mixed with either cooled boiled water, or formula or breast milk. To begin with offer a small amount on the tip of a clean spoon, midway through a feed, once a day. Once your baby has accepted this, you can introduce a small amount of fruit or vegetable puree, for example, banana, potato, or carrot (with no added salt or sugar), mixed with formula or breast milk.
As soon as your baby has got used to taking solids off a spoon, you can begin to introduce new foods and other solids at a second meal. If your baby obviously doesn’t like the taste of something don’t force matters. Try another food and reintroduce the rejected food at a later stage. At first the baby will simply try to suck anything off the spoon. But it won’t take long to master getting the food off the spoon and into the back of her mouth. Once your baby can do this she will be able to cope with lumpier textures, so you can begin to mash rather than puree food. Your baby will also be able to enjoy a wider variety of tastes and textures.
Advanced feeding At around eight months, you can introduce food combinations such as baby cereal and fruit, or egg yolk and tomato — remember to remove the seeds from the tomato and to cook the egg thoroughly. Food can be lumpier and more solid so that it encourages your baby to start chewing. Try mincing or mashing the food with a fork.
At nine months and over, your baby is likely to be on three meals a day as well as milk, unsweetened diluted fruit juice, or water. Giving your child food at grown-up meal-times will encourage her to learn social skills by watching others. As her appetite grows you can gradually increase the amount given at each meal. Offer finger foods such as slices or peeled apple, and banana; this will encourage her to feed herself Always stay with your child while she is eating in case of choking.
As with younger babies, don’t force unwanted foods; your child may simply not be ready for that particular taste. Don’t ever fight over it. Take the food away, but don’t offer alternatives or provide snacks between meals or let the child fill up on drinks, especially non-nourishing drinks, such as squash.
Tags: feeding, food
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