Provides guidelines on when and how to start introducing solid foods to your baby, including signs of readiness.
Provides guidelines on when and how to start introducing solid foods to your baby, including signs of readiness.
Offers advice on choosing the right types of foods for initial solid food experiences to ensure they are safe and nutritious.
Discusses effective feeding techniques and tips to encourage babies to accept new textures and tastes without stress.
Weaning is integral to your baby’s early development. It is a transitional phase for your baby as he starts to experience new tastes and textures from a wider range of foods. Solid foods help your baby to practice lip, tongue, and jaw movements as he chews and swallows his food. The importance of weaning your baby at the right time lays the groundwork for all-around development and healthy eating habits as your baby grows older.4
As far as developmental milestones go, weaning takes months. It’s an ongoing process that takes careful preparation, and hands-on practice. There will be various signs that appear from around 6 months of age, to show that your baby is ready for his first solid foods alongside infant formula.
When to Start Solid Food For Your Baby
The recommended age to start weaning your baby is between 4 to 6 months of age. Aside from age, you can also tell if your baby is ready to wean from his development. Signs your baby is ready for solids include:
How to Start Your Baby on Solid Food
It is easier for your 6-month-old baby to eat food that is mashed, pureed, or strained and very smooth in texture. Between 7 and 10 months, your baby’s food can be a little thicker and coarser and subsequently between 11 months and above, the food needs to only be in small bite-sized pieces.
It can take time for your child to adjust to new food textures. You can introduce various food groups to him in no particular order1, but it helps to start with fruits and vegetables.2 These two food groups are the easiest to make baby-safe and baby-ready.
Give your baby solid food made with only one main ingredient, pureed or mashed carrot or chicken, or an example. It is best to wait a few days before giving something new. This is the best way to observe any allergic reactions that may develop to each new ingredient1. Once your baby becomes more used to eating solids, you can start to give him potentially allergenic foods like eggs, dairy, wheat, nuts, and fish.2
Keep in mind that breastmilk and/or formula milk should still make up the majority of your baby’s nutrition and nourishment, even as he starts to eat more solids. Continue giving your baby breastmilk during the weaning process.
Types of Baby's First Foods to Wean
Take a look at examples of what you can introduce as solid foods for your baby from the four major food groups below.2
How Much Solid Food to Give to Your Baby
Parents should keep in mind that, as each baby is different, there’s no strict portion size that he needs to abide by. Experts recommend feeding your baby according to appetite, and not according to portion size.7-8
If your baby seems full or uninterested in eating, it’s best to stop feeding, even if he hasn’t finished the amount of food prepared. You can tell that your baby’s full or uninterested in eating with the following signs8:
What is Baby-led Weaning?
Instead of spoon-feeding your baby, you can choose to let him feed himself with tiny bits of food. This approach is called baby-led weaning.2
Some parents choose baby-led weaning exclusively, while others use a combination of baby-led weaning with spoon-feeding. While there’s no one method that experts recommend more than the other, if you’re having a hard time spoon-feeding your baby, you can switch to baby-led weaning instead.
Baby-led weaning usually begins with giving your baby matchstick-sized bits of food – not bite-sized finger food, as the latter can potentially be a choking hazard. Matchstick-sized foods are easier for your baby to hold. Most babies at 6 to 8 months haven’t mastered the pincer grasp yet (using the thumb and index finger) and tend to pick up food using the whole palm.
Once your baby develops the pincer grasp, which usually takes place around 8-9 months, food such as mango, cooked beans, steamed spinach and pasta can be cut into pieces.2 By this time, your child would have also mastered swallowing and working through their gag reflex.
The Benefits of Baby-led Weaning
Though evidence is mixed and inconclusive at the moment, some research suggests that baby-led weaning can lead to less fussy eaters and a reduced risk of obesity.5
That aside, there are plenty of proven advantages to this approach.5-6 Baby-led weaning:
Whilst switching to solids can be an uphill challenge for some parents, the joy of witnessing your baby achieve this milestone is certainly one to cherish.
References:
1 When, What, and How to Introduce Solid Foods – CDC. Accessed January 18, 2022.
2 What to feed your baby – NHS. Accessed January 18, 2022.
3 Stages of weaning – Our Health Service. Accessed January 19, 2022.
4 Feeding Your Baby: The First Year – Cleveland Clinic. Accessed January 19, 2022.
5 Baby-led weaning: pros and cons – NCT UK. Accessed January 18, 2022.
6 Baby-Led Weaning: What You Need to Know – Cleveland Clinic. Accessed January 18, 2022.
7 Portion sizes during weaning – Solid Start. Accessed January 10, 2022.
8 Portion Sizes – Beaba. Accessed January 10, 2022.
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