Weaning Archives - The Parent Social https://www.theparentsocial.com/tag/weaning/ Sharing all things lifestyle and parenting Thu, 20 Apr 2023 15:25:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://i0.wp.com/www.theparentsocial.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/cropped-android-chrome-512x512-1.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Weaning Archives - The Parent Social https://www.theparentsocial.com/tag/weaning/ 32 32 47739018 10 Useful Facts I Gleaned from Weaning https://www.theparentsocial.com/10-useful-facts-i-gleaned-from-weaning/ https://www.theparentsocial.com/10-useful-facts-i-gleaned-from-weaning/#respond Sat, 20 Jul 2013 21:10:27 +0000 http://www.theparentsocial.com/?p=851 I have three very good eaters and aside from a few hiccups, weaning was very successful. However, that didn’t mean I didn’t worry about what they could and couldn’t eat at certain ages and how much they should be having. 10 things I learnt during the weaning journey 1) Babies can eat prawns from six [...]

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I have three very good eaters and aside from a few hiccups, weaning was very successful. However, that didn’t mean I didn’t worry about what they could and couldn’t eat at certain ages and how much they should be having.

10 things I learnt during the weaning journey

Weaning

Feeding fun.

1) Babies can eat prawns from six months

2) From one year of age your child can eat brie, camembert and other mould-ripened soft cheeses (made with pasteurised milk)

3) Raw kidney beans are poisonous (cooked kidney beans are fine)

4) Children can’t eat honey until they are one due to the risk of botulism

5) From six months babies can have cow’s milk added to their food and from one can have full fat milk as a main drink

6) Little ones can have eggs in any shape or form, as long as they are well-cooked, from six months

weaning

Weaning

7) Think in terms of what your child has eaten in a week as opposed to during one meal or even during a whole day (easier said than done I know)

8) It’s fine to pep food up with herbs and spices from 6 months. I’m talking about aromatic spices as opposed to ‘hot’ spices.  That said, I introduced my twins to chilli con carne, which included 1tsp of chilli powder, at around 9-10 months. You can find the recipe I use on this post.

9) You can give pureed meat, chicken or fish from six months (I started with milder-tasting fish and chicken before quickly moving onto red meats)

10) You can give finger foods from six months. Large pieces/slices/chunks of steamed veggies, and fruits are ideal. As are sticks of cheese and grissini aka bread sticks (check for salt content though)

Check out: The first steps in negotiating the minefield of baby weaning

Common weaning and
 feeding problems and ways to resolve them


Weaning

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Weaning Babies, the First Steps https://www.theparentsocial.com/babyweaning/ https://www.theparentsocial.com/babyweaning/#comments Sat, 09 Mar 2013 09:55:08 +0000 http://www.theparentsocial.com/?p=495 The subject of weaning seems to produce a lot of conflicting advice. It also seems to create parental competitiveness and general fear and loathing. What starts off as excitement about baby’s first slurps can often descend into panic, frustration and upset. Weaning isn’t rocket science and certainly isn’t an exact science. However, it can become [...]

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The subject of weaning seems to produce a lot of conflicting advice. It also seems to create parental competitiveness and general fear and loathing. What starts off as excitement about baby’s first slurps can often descend into panic, frustration and upset.

Weaning isn’t rocket science and certainly isn’t an exact science. However, it can become over-complicated and a chore. It doesn’t have to be like that. At the start you will need to do extra work if you aren’t using pre-prepared baby food. However, you can quickly progress to a stage where they eat a lot of what the rest of the family is (omitting salt and very strong spices).

Weaning styles

Aside from when to start (WHO recommends six months), one of the first weaning issues seems to be what ‘style’ of weaning to use. There seems to be two camps: baby-led and traditional spoon-feeding. Finger foods allow babies to self-feed. Finger foods also stimulate their interest in food and most babies seem to enjoy them. However, spoon-fed purees give a much better idea of how much they’ve eaten and provide greater parental control. It’s almost as if the style you choose defines what kind of parent you are! Nobody talks about a combination or composite approach, which blends the two styles. However, it’s easy to combine them for a flexible and common sense approach to weaning.

Weaning

Baby-led weaning

Pros:

  • Greater independence
  • Develops pincer grasp/fine motor skills
  • Self regulate food intake – learn to understand hunger cues
  • Linked with lower instances of obesity in later life

Cons:

  • Potential for iron deficiency
  • Choking more likely
  • More difficult to ascertain whether baby has eaten enough
  • Fewer foods that can be offered as not all suitable as finger foods

Spoon feeding

Pros:

  • Parent is able to monitor more easily how much is consumed
  • Greater variety of food can be offered
  • Baby can eat the same as the rest of the family
  • Easier to make nutritionally balanced meals

Cons:

  • Lack of child independence
  • Has been linked to obesity as child could keep eating until parent decides they’ve had enough
  • Don’t understand hunger cues so well

Where to begin with weaning?

In the beginning one ‘meal’ a day (a couple of spoons) is fine. The aim is to introduce the concept of food; the different flavours and textures. In the early stages the actual nutritional value is secondary as your little one’s nutritional needs will be predominantly satisfied by milk. Although obviously don’t introduce things that are actually bad for your baby!

Baby rice on its own is bland but is still a good starting point. You can progress pretty quickly and combine it with steamed fruits for a breakfast. You can also use it to bulk up vegetable purees. Within a few weeks it will probably have served its purpose!

Don’t be afraid to move fast and up ‘meals’ to three a day if your baby enjoys it. In the early stages this won’t affect their milk intake. Milk intake will only really start to decrease when you introduce proteins. Trust your instincts. If they’re a little unsure then stick to one meal of a couple of spoons a day for a while. However, if your little one is enjoying it then give them as much as they want.

Once you’re properly up and running you can introduce lumpier textures. You can roughly mash vegetables instead of pureeing or give whole veg as finger foods.

There’s nothing wrong with using frozen vegetables to supplement fresh fruit and veg. In the case of things such as peas, the frozen variety often surpasses the fresh. They are frozen within a couple of hours of being picked so very few nutrients are lost.

Examples of baby’s first foods (first couple of weeks)

  • Sweet potato puree
  • Brocoli and potato puree
  • Cauliflower puree
  • Carrot, baby rice and baby’s usual milk
  • Baby rice and mashed fruit (banana, steamed apple, steamed pear)
  • Mashed avocado

Next couple of weeks

      • Big pasta with grated cheese as a finger food (or very small pasta to spoon feed)
      • Pasta with simple tomato sauce
      • Omelette (well cooked) with cheese, spinach etc
      • Cauliflower and broccoli in cheese sauce
      • Toast
      • Vegetable puree with couscous
      • Steamed vegetables as a finger food (green beans, mange tout, tender stem broccoli, carrots etc)
      • Rice cakes
      • Fingers of cheese
      • Cherry tomatoes (cut in half to avoid choking hazard)



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Common weaning and feeding problems and ways to resolve them https://www.theparentsocial.com/common-weaning-and-feeding-problems-and-ways-to-resolve-them/ https://www.theparentsocial.com/common-weaning-and-feeding-problems-and-ways-to-resolve-them/#respond Tue, 05 Mar 2013 11:16:58 +0000 http://www.theparentsocial.com/?p=436 You’ve bought the right high chairs, all the cups, spoons, tubs, bowls and bibs; and your baby really seems to be enjoying solids. Then it all goes wrong. Problem one – barely eating Even if weaning has been going well from the start, a number of problems can rear their ugly heads at any point. [...]

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You’ve bought the right high chairs, all the cups, spoons, tubs, bowls and bibs; and your baby really seems to be enjoying solids. Then it all goes wrong.

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Problem one – barely eating

Even if weaning has been going well from the start, a number of problems can rear their ugly heads at any point. A very common one is that your once fantastic eater suddenly becomes fussy or point blank refuses most of the foods that they previously enjoyed. Rest assured, this is normal and is often linked to your child’s growing independence. Until now, they’ve had relatively little control over their daily routine. However, food is one way that they can exert their independence; and often do!

The main thing to remember is to try not to panic even when you know that your child has eaten very little. This can be easier said than done. However, one thing that can help is to think more in terms of what they’ve eaten over a week as opposed to getting hung up on individual meals or even days.

If breakfast is something that they enjoy, there’s no harm in giving breakfast type foods as an evening meal. It’s better to have repetition (of good foods) than nothing at all. Almost always, these issues resolve themselves, but in the meantime you need a few tactics up your sleeve.

Finger foods are often a good way to negotiate it. Dried fruits such as apricots and raisins are often appealing as are grissini (bread sticks) and fromage frais for children. Babies are a very different proposition to toddlers – if a toddler refuses food that you know they like I wouldn’t advocate offering lots of things. I would however, advocate withholding ‘treats’ such as dessert. In the earlier stages of weaning, I would personally recommend trying a few things in the fussier phases, but keep returning to the foods that they previously enjoyed but recently rejected.

Problem two – refusing a spoon

One of my children went through a month-long period of refusing anything off a spoon unless it was her favourite wheat breakfast cereal – for that she would make an exception. Then, just as suddenly as the phase started it ended. It did stress me out for a time, especially as her twin sister had no such qualms and was eating like a trooper; the comparison was not good and made me fret even more. However, after several days of getting into a state I decided this was not helping matters. My baby was absolutely fine, wasn’t wasting away and would eat with a few modifications.

Firstly, she would eat breakfast from a spoon so I just made sure that, that breakfast was very hearty. I then discovered that the same things that she refused from a spoon when offered to her on a piece of crusty bread were fine. I don’t think she could have been eating as much as her sister, but the main thing was she was now eating a variety of different things again, just off a piece of bread instead. Also, this was where finger foods came into their own as, again, these were fair game. Homemade pizza and big pieces of pasta were other winners. All along I kept offering her the spoon. She kept on refusing and then suddenly one day decided it was fine again. She had obviously made her point!

Problem three – wanting to self-feed but actually eating very little

Obviously it’s great if your baby wants to feed herself, and this is something that you are striving towards and will free up a lot of your time. However, in the earlier stages when their hand eye co-ordination isn’t honed and their fine motor skills aren’t great this can often mean very little food actually makes it into their mouth. You don’t want to discourage them from self-feeding but at the same time you do want them to have some food. Sounds obvious, but the best way around this is an additional spoon – or sometimes even two extra spoons – for them to hold and feed themselves whilst you get them to eat the majority of their food. Another way is for them to have finger foods and when they’re having a rest spoon in the other part of the meal. Hopefully then everyone is happy.



Problem four – eating out or on the go

This is where a composite approach is ideal. There is no need to take out stuff that needs extra preparation on arrival and requires heating up. Many venues won’t heat up food in a microwave or provide boiling hot water in a bowl due to health and safety issues. Therefore if you’re not giving your child jar food or food pouches such as Ella’s Kitchen, and they’re not quite ready for the children’s menu in a restaurant you need to do something else. If I’m eating at a cafe I take a back up of rice cakes, cherry tomatoes, fruit etc to supplement menu items such as sandwiches and paninis (which seem to go down well). For longer car journeys – when you don’t know what might be available en route – things like leftover chicken cut into strips, cooked and cooled omelette; and pre-streamed and cooled veg such as mange tout, tenderstem broccoli, green beans and carrots are ideal – as are things like cubes of cheese and dried fruit. Another winner with children from about six-and-a-half months onwards is ripe, ready-to-eat avocado, which is both easy and nutritious. You can just cut it open when required and literally spoon-feed it direct, cut it into pieces for them to hold or even take inspiration from Annabel Karmel and mash it with some banana and natural greek yoghurt. Obviously, a cool bag is an advisable piece of kit.

Annabel Karmel weaning book. A bible for many.

Annabel Karmel weaning book. A bible for many.

Problem five – fishy about fish

Fish that isn’t direct from the Captain’s table is often a hard sell. Aside from homemade goujons of fish, which are great, I find that fish such as salmon that’s baked in tin foil in the oven with shallots, plenty of butter and lemon juice (so that it is very moist) is one of the better bets as is kedgeree or any fish dish that has a creaminess about it; think milk poaching. Natural greek yoghurt appears to be a secret weapon which makes lots of potential misses hits. If whipped into mashed cooked fish it almost makes a chunky pate which seems to go down very well and can even be fed with bread. Then Calamari for when they’re a little bit older. All three of my girls love calamari and it seems a hit generally with all of the children I know. It’s so simple to do at home. Just get frozen packs of cleaned squid, defrost, cut into tubes, coat in seasoned flour (shaking off excess) and deep fry in veg oil on a very high heat for 2-3 minutes. I blot them on kitchen roll afterwards to remove the excess oil.

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