Showing posts with label baby food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baby food. Show all posts

Sunday, April 15, 2012

First Foods

Tonight I made my first batch of "baby food".  I was cooking up sweet potato wedges for us, so I made some sweet potato cubes for the freezer.  I left a little bit out to give to Nora during dinner.  I'm pretty sure she liked it way better than avocado or banana!  A little bit even got swallowed, though I had to hose her down in the shower after dinner.  Three lessons learned:

1) BIBS - Why did I forget that these exist?  I don't know.


2) Sweet potatoes really bring out the blue in her eyes

3) She really wants to do it herself!  Which is messy, but at least lets me eat my food.  Haha

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Giving Peas Another Chance

I've been sort of off the wagon on baby food preparation lately. Joseph's been more interested in finger foods, so he's been eating a lot of cooked chicken, hummus on crackers, banana, and yogurt. He is/was teething so he just really wasn't eating very much (but nursing more).

Now things seem to be picking up again, so I decided to do some ice cube trays of food today. I'd cooked and mashed some sweet potato the other day, so I put that up. I had also turned some apples into sauce and froze that into cubes as well. Then I figured I'd try to get some more green veggies in again. We've been seriously lacking on that score, unless you count avocado. I cooked up a bag of frozen peas and gave Joseph a few since he was eating dinner. He gobbled them right up! So I gave him a bunch more, and he ate them all before eating his other food! He didn't really care for whole peas before, so I was seriously impressed.

I also got a tip from my friend Cate that her son, Jackson, loves chicken sausage with apple. I was at Publix yesterday and saw them (Chicken with maple syrup and apple) so I grabbed a package. Oh my goodness those things are GOOD. Joseph liked them, and I have to make myself not eat them all before he gets them!

He's also enjoying mango, melon, oranges, and kiwi as of late. I'm so excited that yummy stuff is showing back up in the stores! I can't wait for strawberry season.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Turning Circles

So, after struggling (and talking, and struggling) all weekend with this weight gain thing, I've decided that the whole thing is ridiculous. Sure, he's small. Maybe there is even something "wrong". However, I'm not going to try to solve it by feeding the poor child cake and ice cream. Yes, that's what I resorted to today before I decided that it was ridiculous. And he didn't even want it.

I cannot make my child eat. All I can do is provide him with healthy, nutritious, and hopefully tasty food that he'll WANT to put in his mouth, and make those as calorie dense as possible. So while I will no longer be trying to sneak tahini into his yogurt (that went over like a lead balloon) and cajole him into eating chocolate cake and ice cream (seriously - he is his father's child. No kid like me would refuse that!) I will add a little more of it to hummus, put some butter or olive oil in veggies, etc... as well as try to give him less "empty" stuff like oat circles.

If he isn't where the pediatrician wants him to be in a month, then we can consider doing some testing to rule out things like allergies or celiac disease. And also get a second opinion.

The end. For now. ;) Thanks for all the support, T.J. and I appreciate it!

Friday, March 12, 2010

Doctor Update

I decided to call the doctor and see if she would agree with trying to feed Joseph more often and high calorie/fat things for a month to see how he progressed with his weight. She agreed, so now we're on

OPERATION CHUNKY MONKEY!

Give me your best ideas for (reasonably) healthy high fat, high calorie foods. Here's what we do so far on the high fat/calorie end of things:

whole milk yogurt
bananas
avocados
cheese
hummus
tofu
red meat
sweet potato
butter/olive oil

Things I'm thinking of adding in:

whole milk (cow)
heavy cream (either whipped w/ a small amount of sugar or to supplement milk)
ice cream (though I hate the idea - which was why I liked the heavy cream idea better)
bacon???
banana bread/muffins

I tried hot dog last night and today, but Joseph wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole. Also, I need to still get some healthy fruits and veggies in him, without filling him up too much. If you have ideas on that (especially green veggies) please post in the comments or send me an email!

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Feeding an Infant

So, I finally had a bit of a revelation regarding Joseph's food intake. I had been so concerned about it, but really, he nurses so much still that it really doesn't matter what he eats for solids, so long as he gets some iron in. And that's covered by his vitamin.

In that vein, I decided to stop making purees. About the same time (well, a little before) Joseph stopped gagging on solids. Timing is everything, people! I'm learning that you can't make a kid do anything ahead of their own schedule.

He's really enjoying feeding himself now, and wants to hold the spoon all the time. We regularly have two in rotation these days, and I let him self-feed whatever I can.

We've been branching out some in the food department. I can't remember where I left off on here, but he eats a wide variety of stuff now. In the last couple of days he's had cheerios, yogurt, banana, clementine (a whole one!), hummus on crackers, cheese, mixed veggies, salmon with balsamic blueberry reduction, polenta with spaghetti sauce and parmesan, and grilled chicken. I'm trying to give him more of the foods that I make for T.J. and myself. It seems to be working pretty well! He had some of my gumbo and red beans and rice - he loves to eat from Mama's plate! Everything tastes better that way, I guess.

We're still focusing on organic food where we can for all of us.

Without sounding like a know-it-all, here's my take away from feeding Joseph:

1) A child will let you know if he's hungry
2) Babies take a long time to self feed, be patient
3) Don't fret too much about how much and what they eat (see #1)
4) Keep nursing on demand!

Of course, now that I've got it all figured out he's turning ONE in a couple of weeks. Then I'll have to figure toddlers out!

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Cheese, please!

I've been introducing some more finger foods with Joseph this week. We did cheese last night, and it was a big hit! He seemed to like it a lot. I also gave him some peas/carrots/corn, and he preferred to throw that all over the kitchen. He did eat some of it, but most got tossed around. I can see why people like having dogs.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Da da da and More!

Oh! Hi Daddy! Look at the cute longies Tante Teresa made me!

Yep, now all he says is da-da. A day late and a dollar short, kid! Apparently me saying it nonstop for a month straight worked, though. I better be careful with "no" if he learns to say things that fast!

Today we went to the aquarium with Auntie Debbie, who is in for the weekend. I must have worn them both out - Joseph and Debbie both slept for 2.5 hours this afternoon! Made for a lazy afternoon for mama, as Joseph spent a lot of that time in my arms. I can't say I minded, though. Days where he sleeps in my arms are few and far between, now!

He tried a new food today! Whole milk yogurt! I just bought a tub of the stoneyfields organic and froze it in 1 oz cubes like the rest of his food. He ate 2 cubes with about 1/3 of a banana mixed in for a snack tonight. He is not a picky eater at all, so far! It's great.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

More moving = More eating

Mmmm Food


Joseph cannot seem to get enough lately! He nurses all.night.long (it seems anyway) in addition to 5 or 6 nursing sessions during the day, and chows down at every meal! Here's a typical day:

Breakfast:
3 Tbsp banana-pumpkin pie
1/2 egg yolk

Lunch:
3 Tbsp squash
3 Tbsp green beans
3 Tbsp apple

Dinner:
3 Tbsp sweet potato
3 Tbsp peas
3 Tbsp pear

Tonight he also ate 1/4 an avocado and I added in about 1/4 c of rice cereal an hour before bed and he ate that up, too! I think I need to add a 4th (and 5th?) meal in here, because he does seem stuffed by the end of meal time and sometimes spits up a bit. I also have yogurt, cheese, and meat to start adding in.

I thought they didn't start eating like this till they were teenagers?!?

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Labor of Love

OK, I'm not gonna lie. I'm finding baby-food making to be time consuming and somewhat stressful!

I do think it's best for Joseph, and I plan to continue on our path of homemade cooking, but sometimes it feels like another part-time job! Planning, shopping, cleaning, cooking, pureeing, doling out into ice cube trays, freezing, bagging and tagging. Trying to figure out a menu. Then defrosting/reheating. Not to mention finding ways to make it portable (frozen cubes don't fit in baby food jars - doh!

Yes, it's definitely more work. Is it worth it? I think so. But a heck of a lot more work than popping open a jar! Perhaps once he's eating table food things will be less work, and T.J. and I can start eating more healthfully again, too. I've found that after caring and feeding Joseph, we often end up with hamburgers, macaroni, ramen, or pizza. T.J. is in heaven.

This week we made blueberries, mango, kabooka squash, delicata squash, green beans, peas, apples, bananas, and pears. Whew!

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Using the Sippy

He's starting to get the hang of it.

Of course, his favorite thing to do is flick water from the top with his finger:

Only slightly less fun is gnawing on the top:Occasionally, however, he does do some sipping:

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Give (homemade) peas a chance.

Last Thursday, Joseph and I attended a mom's group event at a really cool local store called Eco Emporium. In addition to getting to check out the store, we also had a representative from Yummy Spoonfulls there and got to try their organic frozen baby food. Although I don't think it's worth the price for us - I just can't justify $8/lb when making his food is so easy - it did get me in the mood to make baby food again! So yesterday while Joseph napped I made him:

  • sweet potatoes
  • carrots
  • pumpkin
  • delicatta squash
  • broccoli
  • sweet peas
  • green beans
  • peach puree


It only took a couple hours, and it's enough food to last a LONG time. I would guess at least 3 or 4 weeks. Joseph is still needing his food pureed pretty well, so that's how I prepared it all. If you are interested in making your own baby food, I recommend checking out wholesomebabyfood.com - I find it much easier than flipping through books. That's just me, though.

I baked the sweet potato; cut the pumpkin and delicatta squash in half, cleaned them out, and rubbed with a little olive oil and put face down on a cookie sheet to roast; the carrots, peas, broccoli, and green beans got steamed, and the peaches got simmered in a little bit of water. Then I just processed everything in my food processor, adding some of the cooking water if necessary. The peas and green beans got pushed through a strainer to get rid of the hulls.

Interestingly enough, I had one of those jars of peas left in the cupboard. The woman from Yummy Spoonfulls had commented about the color of their food vs. commercial organic, so I compared mine to the jar.

Earth's Best Organic Peas on the left ~ DomerBaby Special on the right
Holy moly. Those colors are actually true to real life, too. We will not be buying any more jarred foods unless we're traveling or something. And for the record, I think the yummy spoonfuls is only marginally more expensive than the jarred Earth's Best, so I'd probably spring for that if/when we need to buy prepared foods for Joseph.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

I was going to take a picture tonight

Joseph looked adorable with his face covered in prunes. They may be his most favorite food. He again ate the entire 2.5oz jar. This time, on his last bite, he ralphed the whole thing up. Again.

So, no pictures for you! Sorry.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

[Sweet] Pea Brain

Sometimes all this reading I do really bites me in the behind.

Today I spent about 10 minutes at our local grocery store debating the merits between buying a jar of organic strained sweet peas for Joseph vs. buying a bag of frozen organic sweet peas and cooking them myself.

I have this "making your own is the best" thing stuck in my head, but if I can get a jar for less than the cost of the frozen ones, am I just being stubborn (and stuck up!)? Environmentally, perhaps you can make a case for the frozen bag - less packaging in total, no water added so it weighs less for shipping. But the jars are glass and the bag is plastic, which uses petroleum... see how difficult this gets?

Generally, making your own is cheaper, but the cost per ounce actually went in the jarred food's favor this time because it was on sale!

I know, I'm neurotic. Anyway, I ended up buying a few jars because they were 3 for $1. Now Joseph has peas, carrots, pears, and apple puree in the lineup.

And to make myself feel better, I still made him some zucchini and some butternut squash for dinner tonight. He liked them both!

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Beets: When good food goes bad

Today I made beets for Joseph. Since they are so very red, I was prepared with a bib, 2 washcloths, and the will to succeed in keeping Joseph's new long-sleeved onesie white.

Yes, I know you are laughing already. I don't blame you.

Joseph was not a huge fan of the beets, I think the texture bothered him, but he ate a good bit of them. Then I guess I gave him too big of a bite. What ensued was beet-colored upchuck all over him, the table, the carpet, the chair, etc...

Normally I do not take pictures of Joseph's puke, but it looked like he'd been involved in a massacre, so it seemed perfect for Halloween.

We're getting hit from every angle lately!

p.s. Beet puke does seem to come out for the most part with good old cold water.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Solid food update

Joseph has now had:

Avocado
Apple sauce
Banana
Sweet Potato
Rice cereal

So far, he loves the sweet potato the best (he ate a whole tablespoon tonight!) and then the banana. The rice cereal was a bust due to my lipase milk issue, and I thought he was enjoying the apple sauce and avocado, but compared to the sweet potato he must loath those!

I think in general solids are going well. He is also learning to drink water from a sippy, though he doesn't really "get" it yet. No rush. He's still nursing wonderfully and is bright-eyed, alert, and making developmental milestones. Today he was not even fooled by "hiding" a toy under his burp cloth! What a smart boy. Ha!

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Applesauce

I had intended to give Joseph avocado for a whole week before moving on to banana and then sweet potato. However, I used all the avocado for guacamole on Saturday, and then yesterday we got rained in, so I decided to give him some applesauce instead, since we had a jar of organic unsweetened lying around for baking.

He made the same face as with avocado (makes me laugh to think about it!) but he gagged less on it today. I also gave him a sippy cup to play with, which was pretty hilarious. He is absolutely obsessed with drinking apparatus. Cups, water bottles, beer bottles, wine glasses... it doesn't matter. The more it sweats, the better. And he throws "temper tantrums" when he can't fit the whole thing in his mouth or I take it back.

I'm hoping he'll get the hang of a sippy and/or straw soon. It'd give us more leeway with him, since he can take expressed breast milk that way then. He still has never really taken to the bottle. My child is kinda weird. But we all knew that.

"Weird? Me? Really?"

Saturday, September 19, 2009

First Food: Avocado

Joseph "enjoyed" some avocado today. I just mashed it with a fork and T.J. fed him. He did pretty well!

I had planned to get organic avocado, but they weren't ripe! So I just went with regular Hass avocados since according to the Environmental Working Group, avocados have one of the lowest pesticide loads. We try to buy organic as much as possible to reduce the amount of pesticides in our diet.

You can see the first 6 minutes of his experience here in video before I switched to stills. Photos are here - for some reason blogger isn't letting me upload to the blog!

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Beginning Baby Food

I think Joseph is ready. He's past 6 months, has lost his tongue-thrust reflex, can sit unassisted (as of this weekend!) and he's close to, if not quite at, two times his birth weight. And he is interested! I had kind of hoped he'd be disinterested until he could deal with non-pureed foods, but in all honesty, we're ready to try something new with him, too! After we talk to the pediatrician on Wednesday I'll probably plan out his first menu. I think it'll be pretty simple: mashed avocado con leche!

Since before he was born, I've planned on making my own baby food. But trusty Auntie Debbie has given me more reason to do it homemade. Check out this article:

If you've been to a couple of baby showers, chances are you have encountered the horrible game of "guess the baby food." Jars without labels are lined up in front of guests. Guests dip a spoon in, taste, cringe, and then try to fathom what alleged combination of foods produced that hideous bland unappetizing flavor. Whenever I have done this I always thought there was some mystical but highly researched reason for this...that babies were odd creatures with utterly different taste sensibilities.
...
The Center for Science and Public Interest released a report entitled Cheating Babies: Nutritional Quality and Cost of Commercial Baby Food. They find that commercial baby food companies routinely dilute the nutritional content (and value) of baby foods with fillers such as starches and water.
...


"Gerber and Heinz dilute many second- and third-stage fruits and vegetables with water and starchy fillers and sweeten them with sugars. That practice greatly reduces the nutrient density of those foods compared to the pure fruit or vegetable product." These fillers include flour, corn syrup, corn, sugar or chemically modified tapioca. Yum, sounds delicious right?

Another problem with the practice of diluting nutritious food with fillers, which the report authors do not raise, is that several of the most common fillers are potential allergens. Corn and Wheat can both potentially cause allergic reactions in small children, and some recent scientific studies suggest that long term allergies, such as the allergy to wheat (Celiac disease), may be reduced by avoiding contact with those foods before babies are one year old (see Scientific American). So by feeding your baby commercially prepared baby foods loaded with fillers, you may be inadvertently exposing them to large quantities of potential allergens.

Researchers found that adulteration was more common with the second and third stage foods than with the stage 1 foods. Adulteration was so rampant that a "2.5-ounce jar of first-stage bananas or first-stage prunes actually contains more fruit than the 4-ounce jars of second-stage products that are adulterated with water and chemically modified starch." A 4 ounce serving of fresh apricots (such as the kind you could make yourself at home) contains twice the potassium and Vitamin A as the commercially prepared Gerber apricots, and approximately four times as much as the Heinz brand jarred apricots.

...

And all those fillers and water add up to greater profits, "Gerber and Heinz replace up to 70% of their second- and third-stage fruits with water and then thicken them with chemically modified tapioca starch. They also add starchy fillers to all their regular second- and third-stage dinners."

American babies consume an average of 600 jars of baby food by the time they are a year old (compared to 240 jars for Western European babies). The study suggests that new parents spend an average of $300 on baby food by the time baby reaches 12 months. And remember, babies don't begin to eat solid foods until they are 4 to 6 months old. Parents who want to purchase commercially prepared organic baby food that has few or no fillers pay considerably more, often $1-1.50 per jar of baby food.

The bottom line?
It is important that baby's first foods be non-allergenic and easily digestible, but commercial baby foods do not have the market on healthy baby food cornered. They became popular in the middle of the 20th Century thanks to ingenious marketing efforts that encouraged the baby food mystique amid general embracing of all things "scientific" as superior to "folk" versions. But the fillers added to commercial baby food dilute its nutritional content, and they are there for profit, not the science of baby nutrition.

Although I am convinced that home made baby foods are nutritionally superior to most commercial options, and are objectively cheaper, in general I think the world has enough judgment in it already, and mothers take more than their fair share. If you are already frazzled and tearing your hair out trying to be a good mom and you just don't think you can manage to make baby food, breathe deeply and relax. Cause you'll get no judgment from me. I think it is cheaper by a long shot and quicker and easier than I ever thought, so I'd love to see a lot of skeptics give it a try, but if it isn't for you don't worry. There are a thousand other ways to show your kid love, and she certainly isn't going to flunk out of calculus in 18 years just because you didn't puree her baby food at home.

If you want to give homemade baby food a try, check back next week for the second post in my baby food series, where I talk you through the entire process of making your own cheap, fast, easy, organic baby food at home. And remember those horrible tasting commercial jars? The baby food you make at home tastes just like, well, food.


If you didn't read all of that, the gist is that baby foods are filled with nasty fillers and sugar instead of the healthy foods they claim! Gross!

It'd be great if we didn't need regulations on EVERYTHING in this country because of the bottom line [and heck, maybe we wouldn't if they'd cut farm subsidies that overproduce said fillers]. Corporate America makes me so sick lately. I can't believe all the things people have to fight against to preserve the health of themselves their children. Grr.

Sorry for the Yey-Joseph-will-get-solids-turned-political-rant.

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