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14 answers

fruit is a great form of finger foods, I highly suggest banananas, and melons. They are slipery and will make the baby try harder to hold it. this will cause the baby to focus more on it. have fun though, it can be messy, but that is what kids are all about.

2006-11-13 04:44:33 · answer #1 · answered by sr22racing 5 · 1 0

Graham crackers are great since they will get soggy while being gummed if the baby doesn't chew it all up.

Also those toddler teething cookies are good (I think they're by gerber).

My son liked sliced bannanas, dry cereal, french fries, toast, cooked carrots, green beans (that was his favorite) and pretty much anything he could pick up with his fingers and not have to work too hard on chewing!

He didn't like meat very much so we didn't give him much meat except maybe a little chopped up hamburger with catsup from time to time.

Whatever you decide to give your baby, be sure to stick around to be sure the food is getting chewed and not swallowed whole. First signs that the baby is having a problem with the food (besides picking it up), take the food away and reintroduce that one later, in a few weeks, after the baby's gotten the hang of eating other foods.

2006-11-13 04:47:46 · answer #2 · answered by neona807 5 · 0 0

mixed frozen veggies work really well (cooked obviously). Try not to give corn though becuase their bodies cannot digest it well. Try steaming finely diced pears, apples, or peaches as well. Try not to feed foods with salts or sugars at this age.

Gerber makes some good finger foods for baby. They come in jars just like the regular baby food.

2006-11-13 05:29:13 · answer #3 · answered by Summer H 3 · 0 0

My son (now 2) replaced into completly off of purrees and jarred nutrients through 10 months previous. He refused to eat it at that factor. Very independant, he too needed to self feed. From that factor on, he ate what some thing of the family individuals ate (with some exceptions for choking threat causes). i do not understand what number enamel your baby has and if he's waiting to bite solids. My son reduce his enamel very early, and had all his enamel at this factor (except the molars). I used to bake hen breast and rip it up into tiny toddler bite sized products. All cooked vegetables in bite length products, to boot as end result. once maximum little ones get a style for "authentic" nutrients, they have a tendency to not want to eat the jarred stuff anymore (and that i will't say I blame them)! If he's exhibiting pastime now in feeding himself, enable him do it. only make constructive the products are tiny and that you supervise.

2016-11-23 19:39:36 · answer #4 · answered by vanderburg 4 · 0 0

Any vegetable bite sized and cooked, no salt. Be careful of meats, they could choke. You might try Vienna sausages, they mush up and the baby won't choke. Crackers, Cheerios, squishy fruits (banana bites, ripe peaches) or use the canned fruit cocktail in its own juice (no sugar). Canned fruits & vegis are usually cut up into little bite sizes and real convenient. Store in tupperware (or similar) NOT in the can.

2006-11-13 04:47:20 · answer #5 · answered by GP 6 · 1 0

Cheerios! Also soft crackers, tiny slices of cheese, soft fruits like melons or strawberries cut in little pieces, pasta/macaroni, peas, other soft cooked vegetables like carrots and potatoes, there are lots of things you can start to feed your baby, just always keep an eye on him/her and never let them eat unsupervised. Have fun, babies are so adorable!

2006-11-13 04:44:54 · answer #6 · answered by joplinette 2 · 0 0

bean and peas also fruit. Toast is good to all things that are soft and a baby can suck.

CEREALS: 4 to 6 months
VEGETABLES: 7 months
FRUITS: 8 months
MEATS: 10 months
EGG YOLKS: 10 months
CHEESE AND YOGURT: 10 to 12 months


Here are more things for your baby to eat on this web site
http://www.nncc.org/Nutrition/make.babyfd.html

2006-11-13 04:47:21 · answer #7 · answered by Jinxy 3 · 1 0

finger foods for a 9 month old that they won't choke on- or don't have as great of a chance of choking on...

Cheerio's work very well. Also you can buy like gerber biter buscuits or whatever--

2006-11-13 04:44:06 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

peas
well-cooked carrots
chunks of baked potato
plain, unsalted rice cakes
bagels
waffles
pancakes
toast
cut up spaghetti
shredded cheese
crackers
Cheerios
Rice Chex
blueberries
slices of apple (no skin)
pieces of well cooked tender meats
cubes of extra firm tofu

2006-11-13 04:52:47 · answer #9 · answered by momma2mingbu 7 · 1 1

Anything you are eating that doesn't contain too much salt or something dangerous like honey, peanuts, dairy, wheat.

2006-11-13 04:42:11 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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