Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi there,


I have an 8 month old girl who is loving food!


She likes to feed herself, which is fine, she can handle wholemeal toast, pineapple strips etc.


Can she eat cream cheese, hard cheese?


Can she have baked beans on toast, eggs on toast?


Also, what is an idea packed lunch/picnic for her?


Sorry for all these questions, but cannot really get an answer from the food books.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/10946-8-month-old-what-food-to-eat/
Share on other sites

a great book to look at is the annabel karmel food plannner. It has sort of meal timetables so you know how much and how often to give food and meal ideas etc. Also says when to introduce new foods etc was brilliant. I didnt follow it exactly as stated(its very detailed saying what to give for everymeal, I mixed it up to suit me) but I found it very useful to help with when to drop bottles and quantaties etc. you might be able to get a copy form the library or we got ours from amazon.

The short answer is - anything she'll eat! No honey (apparently there can be pollen in it which is dangerous), watch the salt - don't add any and keep it low, and no cow's milk before 1 year. Those seem to be the general rules. As her dexterity improves you can give smaller and smaller pieces. Oh yes - and no nuts due to the choking hazard.


My baby is also entirely self-fed. Cream cheese and regular cheese are both fine - just keep a check on the salt. I've given him all sorts of eggs (not runny). Also with toast I've done avacado (I don't mush it up too much - just scoop it out and then mash it right onto the bread) and hazelnut butter. The hazelnut butter I found in SMB foods and use it instead of peanut butter only because it has no salt.


He's not crazy about baked beans just yet, but yesterday he ate some kidney beans I had mixed in with some onions and peppers for fajitas. Fajitas are great because he loves courgette, red onion, and broccoli which I generally put in. He also loves to suck and chew on strips of steak and lamb and to suck on chicken and meat bones!


Tomatoes are also a favourite because he sucks the mushy stuff and then spits out the skin. I'll either give him a quartered tomato or cherry tomato cut in half. Same principle with grapes and cucumbers - I give either circle or half moon shapes and he sucks out the middle. Last week he went crazy for kiwi. With pineapple, I also give him the skin after I've cut it and he loves to hold it and suck off the remaining pineapple. Same thing with mango stones.


My husband and I have a pretty varied, healthy diet and we love to cook, so we've never really used any of the baby food recipie books. Basically, I just give him whatever we're eating or a more appropriate version of it (e.g. taking out a portion for him before adding salt for ourselves, giving him the fajita stuff separately rather than wrapped in a tortilla). Don't be afraid to try just about anything and see how she gets on. Have fun. I LOVE watching my son enjoy food.

-A

yep- basically same as Apenn. we give our son a lot of our leftovers from the night before, for his tea, as that's the only meal when I'm not eating with him so can't just share what I'm having. Admittedly those portions will have salt in but we don't really use much, and it's that lo-salt stuff, and I figure he balances it out with lots of other healthy things like steamed veg (can get handy frozen packs of them), tomatoes - eaten exactly as Apenn describes - carrots both cooked and raw - and any fruit really. I found the stage just after your little one's age - so say 9ish months - was when it all fell into place and I got much more relaxed about it all.


to answr your questions though -

cream cheese great, philadelphia etc - hard cheese my little boy seems less keen on but I grate it onto baked beans, reheated mashed sweet potato, even peas

hard boiled eggs mashed onto toast fingers works well and is perfectly healthy I'd say

ditto baked beans - you can get low salt ones, I buy those little snap packs and they just take a minute in the microwave and amazingly cool down quite quickly so are ideal for that 5pm 's**t what am I going to give him for his tea?' moment if you have no afore mentioned leftovers!

Another vote for the approach used by APenn and Belle. With child #1 we went the Annabel Karmel route (which is excellent, and her books are useful. I still cook some recipes from her books which we all eat). #2 was fed on the same food we eat from early in the weaning process due a combination of not enough hours in the day to puree and her reluctance to eat anything that didn't look like what her brother was having (17 months older than her).


I don't add salt to our food, so not a problem for them to have the same as us. For recipes that are spicy I just take their portions out before adding chilli etc.


Up to the age of 1 the most important thing is that you have fun with it - don't worry too much about how much they're eating as it's still milk that they get the majority of their nutrients from. Give a range of tastes/textures and enjoy!

You can use cows milk in cooking, (unless you're particularly worried about allergies) but don't give it as a main drink until 1 year.


Re packed lunches - stuff like breadsticks, rice cakes, little sandwiches (philly or cheese or egg or tuna) or pitta to dip in Hummous

Chopped cucumber, baby tomatoes

Fruit

ClareC Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> My partner won't eat mushrooms, peppers or

> tomato's !??


I didn't eat any of those until I was an adult. Add onion to the list as well. But then at 18 I lived in a house with a bunch of adventurous eaters and was shamed into eating all of my listed hate foods, and wouldn't you know I couldn't live without them now!


I wish I knew why my son won't eat hummous. I love it so much.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Yes, these are all good points. I agree with you, that division has led us down dangerous paths in the past. And I deplore any kind of racism (as I think you probably know).  But I feel that a lot of the current wave of xenophobia we're witnessing is actually more about a general malaise and discontent. I know non-white people around here who are surprisingly vocal about immigrants - legal or otherwise. I think this feeling transcends skin colour for a lot of people and isn't as simple as, say, the Jew hatred of the 1930s or the Irish and Black racism that we saw laterally. I think people feel ignored and looked down upon.  What you don't realise, Sephiroth, is that I actually agree with a lot of what you're saying. I just think that looking down on people because of their voting history and opinions is self-defeating. And that's where Labour's getting it wrong and Reform is reaping the rewards.   
    • @Sephiroth you made some interesting points on the economy, on the Lammy thread. Thought it worth broadening the discussion. Reeves (irrespective of her financial competence) clearly was too downbeat on things when Labour came into power. But could there have been more honesty on the liklihood of taxes going up (which they have done, and will do in any case due to the freezing of personal allowances).  It may have been a silly commitment not to do this, but were you damned if you do and damned if you don't?
    • I'd quit this thread, let those who just want to slag Labour off have their own thread.  Your views on the economy are worth debating.  I'm just stunned how there wasn't this level of noise with the last government.  I could try to get some dirt on Badenoch but she is pointless  Whilst I am not a fan of the Daily Mirror at least there is some respite from Labour bashing. https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/grenfell-hillsborough-families-make-powerful-36175862 https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/nigel-farage-facing-parliamentary-investigation-36188612  
    • That is a bit cake and eat it tho, isn’t it?    At what point do we stop respecting other people’s opinions and beliefs  because history shows us we sometimes simply have no other choice  you are holding some comfort blanket that allows you to believe we are all equal and all valid and we can simply voice different options - without that ever  impacting on the real world  Were the racists we fought in previous generations different? Were their beliefs patronised by the elites of the time? Or do we learn lessons and avoid mistakes of the past?   racists/bigots having “just as much to say” is both true and yet, a thing we have learnt from the past. The lesson was not “ooh let’s hear them out. They sound interesting and valid and as worthy of an audience as people who hold the opposite opinion” 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...