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baby food schedule|Baby Food (Daily Schedule)?

9 November 2011

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!!about baby food schedule tips :It’s very easy to get sucked into the constant advertising of baby powders, creams, and lotions. But the best baby lotion is plain old olive oil—cheap, natural, and un-perfumed. As for other products, keep it as natural, organic, and fragrance-free as possible.
Q&A–: Baby Food (Daily Schedule)?
Hi,

My baby is 1yr old. And she don’t like eat.. I am just analyzing and making the list of food items I am feeding her.

And I am just curious to know, what kind of baby foods that you are feeding to your babies. I would really appreciate if you could mention food name (including brand name and feeding time).

Thanks


The following is the answer: (Hint: The answer is not necessarily.)

Answer by JRRB
If she doesn’t like to eat very much, like my 1st daughter, then she’s probably still learning. Feed her by a 9-12 mo. old’s feeding schedule. www.earthsbest.com has a good one that I went by….

Answer by mystic_eye_cda
Uhh right now he’s eating pulled pork, baked potatoes and frozen corn.

For breakfast he had a banana and leftover scalloped potato.

Probably later on he’ll have a cookie I believe right now the only cookies in the house are Presidents choice Caramel cheesecake.

Its been kind of a draggy day and the house is a disaster (someone has all their toys out). So probably I won’t cook dinner until after my son goes to bed so for dinner he’ll have cereal and fruit or maybe oatmeal.

Seriously STOP BUYING BABY FOOD! My son has never had commercial baby foods, he never ate pureed foods as a baby (now he eats mashed potato and the like if the family is eating them, but he wouldn’t eat anything he couldn’t feed himself as a baby).

Your child will be happier and healthier and YOU will be less stressed if you let your child eat what everyone else in the house is eating. You won’t be measuring evey bite (”oh dear today she only ate half a li’l graduate yesterday she at a whole one”).

Answer by sevenofus
Your daughter could easily move from prepared baby food to eating everything you eat. Provided it is cooked soft and cut into small pieces there are few things she can’t eat at 1 year old. I have been a mom for 28 years to 4 kids (who are now 28, 26, 23, and 10). I am also grandma to a 10 month old grandson and I have provided child care in my home for 20 years. Not all, but most babies are ready to move past prepared baby foods and try the “real” stuff around 12 months old. Feeding themselves is great practice to develop fine motor skills. My grandson, who I also care for during the day, is pretty much off most prepared baby food and eats a lot of table food. For instance, today for breakfast I gave him toast, cut into small pieces, banana cut into small pieces, Cheerios, and formula. He had formula and some graham cracker pieces for a snack. For lunch I made macaroni and cheese (Kraft spirals), chicken, strawberries and canned wax beans. I cut everything up tiny and put it on his high chair and he ate a good share of it. Of course, some ends up in his lap and on the floor, but he is a good eater. Over the weekend, he ate steak, baked potato wedges, and steamed broccoli/cauliflower. Everything is cut up into tiny pieces and he loves to feed himself. He is on a pretty normal schedule with breakfast after he wakes up (time varies dependent on if he wakes up for an early AM bottle or not). Sometimes he just has a bottle of formula before nap, sometimes he has lunch before nap. Dinner is with mom and dad about 6:00. Sometimes he needs a jar of baby food to tide him over if he had an early lunch. If your baby doesn’t like to eat, it may be she’s ready for the next level of food.

Answer by maegs33
He doesn’t eat baby food.

Baby food, the purees or the meals, are unnatural and unnecessary. Not to mention expensive and filled with junk fillers. They just want your money.

My almost 11 month old eats whatever we eat: whole grain cereal, veggies,beans, rice, lentils, fruits, yogurts, breads, soft meats, hummus, you name it. Yesterday, for example, he ate: 7 grain hot cereal (same thing I ate) with a touch of brown sugar, sundried tomato Kashi crackers and dried mango for lunch-ish, lentil soup with carrots, celery, onions and ham hocks. I just let him feed himself.

Your job is to offer her healthy food. Her job is to decide when and how much she eats. Stop stressing about it, if she’s hungry, she’ll ‘ask’ for more. Their tummies are still so small, and a serving size is just a tablespoon, some days they eat nothing, the next day they eat their weight in cheese. She’s not stupid, if you offer her something, and she’s hungry, she’ll eat. Otherwise, relax!

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

baby food schedule
These are useful by me!,news book blog: & healthy food for children.
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baby food schedule–: My baby is 7 months old, what is the appropriate solid food schedule for her?
How often should she be eating solid food, what kind, how much and at what times of the day. And then how much formula should she be eating as she’s eating more solids.


The answer in the following: (Hint: For answers, no site audit.)

Answer by Black Belt
First, ask your pediatrician; you may have food allergies to consider and the doc should be able to give you some guidance here.

I’d check out wholesomebabyfood.com because it has a lot of information on what kind of food you can give and when. Some foods are fine for a 4-month-old and others aren’t recommended till your baby’s closer to 8 or 10 months.

Just remember that at that point, formula is still your baby’s primary source of nutrition. Eating solids is still mostly “practice food.” Your baby is learning to taste, swallow, gum and eventually chew foods, but there’s no way a bit of applesauce is going to provide all the nutrition necessary. Ask your pediatrician how much formula the baby should be getting.

Answer by Amanda
Solids two to three time a day. (1-2oz meals)
Apples
Bananas
Sweet potatoes
potatoes
Pears
Prunes
Brown rice
Oatmeal
Rice cereal
squash
carrots

Pureed of course, with milk (mommy’s or formula) or fresh water. I use the water from the veggies that I boil to puree my baby’s food if I don’t have enough breast milk.

Do not introduce new foods one after another. Wait one week after giving a new food before starting a new one. Feed a new food in the morning or afternoon so that (if she has an allergy) you don’t have a screaming baby in the middle of the night.

She should have 20-24oz of formula still I think. (double check on this)

Answer by tiddled
My oldest son was ready for three meals a day plus dessert, if you don’t mind, about the time he was born!

My oldest daughter wouldn’t touch a thing but me until she was six months old.

They are 34 and 28 now, respectively, happily married, and doing great.

The one thing we were warned about by our pediatrician was to stay away from four things the first year:
honey
wheat products
eggs
citrus

Honey has bacteria not all babies can handle. What products can spark allergies for immature digestive systems. Eggs are used for innoculations and you don’t want to spark allergic reactions. And citrus is a little difficult on little tummies.

Personally I would add to that to stay away from cow’s milk formulas and soy formulas. Neither have benefits worth the risks. Mom or goats’ milk work the best.

Go with what your baby wants. If she is not sleeping through the night yet, you need to at least get her on rice cereal. Strained or squished up fruits and vegetables would be next. Applesauce is usually a favorite and well-tolerated. See what she likes. As she starts to enjoy actual foods, offer her water with the meals and formula in between and at bedtime.

I have never seen a four year old still on formula and refusing to eat food! So don’t panic and just go a little slow so you can see if there are any reactions to any particular food. Give each new food about 3 or 4 days before introducing another, just in case there is a reaction. That way you know immediately which food is causing it.

And if there are reactions, please see your pediatrician right away.

Answer by Kelsey
At 7 months you should be feeding her 2-3 solid meals a day. They don’t need to be big meals, just enough so that she isn’t easy to feed. By this I mean, she will let you know when she has had enough. As long as she is happily eating, feed her more. When she starts to fuss, then she is done. At 7 months you can start to teach her to sign more (putting fingers together) and all done (putting hands up and out) and that can really help you figure out what she wants. Teach her by signing and saying more, and then giving her more. Gently help her put her hands into the sign. When she seems to be done, sign and say all done, then gently help her lift her hands. Then clean her up and let her out of the high chair. Children are wonderfully self regulating at that age, and usually only eat what they need.

As to how much formula, experiment in the same way. Make a large bottle, and let her drink what she wants. When she is done, see how much is left. The next day make it just larger than what she drank. You will soon get a size that works for you. And remember, it could vary from day to day as well.

She should be on fruits and vegis and cereals. You don’t need to introduce meats until around 9 months. If you are just introducing foods, it is often easier if you at first mix them into cereal and formula. The new strong flavors are more often rejected. Then over the course of a few days, add less and less formula and cereal until she is eating it undiluted. If you find certain foods are just plain rejected, try mixing them in with favorites. Be careful not to feed too many orange vegies, though they are often the favorites. You can actually turn your child an orangy color from carotinosis. It is harmless, but looks odd.

I actually often made my own baby food by steaming vegis with a little bit of water and then thowing the water and vegis in the blender. I would then freeze it in ice cube trays and take out 1 or 2 cubes at a time for meals.

Good luck.

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they both long for solid food.
baby food schedule

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