dont rely on anyone here--only your babys doctor will be able to tell you when to start her on new stuff.
every baby and child is different--what is good for one may not be good for yours.
2007-01-11 08:44:02
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answer #1
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answered by Shellberry 5
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She is old enough to try table food. At around six months is the suggested introduction time. Just give her soft and mushy foods like baby cereal, mashed potatos, and jarred stage 2-3 baby food. Stage 3 has small chunks of food in it. IF she is able to "gum" food, stage 3 will be ok. Just give her the same food for a few days to be sure she will not have an allergic reaction to it. Some foods to avoid: Regular milk, eggs, peanut butter, nuts and hot dogs ( easy to get choked on the hot dogs, all others are known to cause allergic reactions in some babies.)
2007-01-11 08:45:52
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I always made baby food out of regular food there is a great cook book called Feed Me I'm Yours that details the process and has great recipes. You could also get soft chunkable foods like yams, banana, Vienna sausages and let her pick up the cubes and gum them. Just avoid anything that would not be gumable and keep grinding her meats and other course foods - with no teeth thinks can easily cause her to choke so be safe and keep foods soft - no cheerios or other small hard things without teeth but Zweebiscuit would be fine. Good Luck !
2007-01-11 08:51:38
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answer #3
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answered by Walking on Sunshine 7
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Try giving her table food that she can eat without needing teeth. Cut some fruit into small pieces and let her nibble on them, macaroni and cheese (cut the noodles in half). You could also just act like her baby food is table food. Get some gerber graduates meals (looks like a TV dinner for young ones), sit her in a booster chair at the table when the rest of the family sits down, and take the food out of the tray it comes in and put it on a plate or in a bowl and let her feed it to herself.
2007-01-11 08:48:24
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, table food is fine, as long as it has the consistency of baby food at first.
Start with canned, warmed carrots, peas, green beans, or mashed potatoes. Soft bread, in small bites, can easily be gummed. Soft meats, like slowly baked chicken and pork chops can be pureed at home or shredded very finely. Try mixing in formula or water to make dry meats easier to swallow and digest. There are many options for "babyfood" made from adult table food.
Baby gums are pretty hard and are able to "chew", as long as your baby shows the maturity to "chew" her food. Just use your best judgement and make sure she doesn't bite more than she can chew.
2007-01-11 08:49:21
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answer #5
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answered by ninn09262 6
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If the toddler somewhat is hungry , she will be able to devour it. yet when she is waiting for the "puree" and receives it each and each and every time, she will be able to save rejecting the table nutrition. regrettably, this would develop into complicated the longer it is going on. My neice changed into not "made" to devour table nutrition and there she changed into at age 2 nonetheless having to have all her nutrition mashed and pureed. She might want to really devour purely about 3 issues, and they had to convey this nutrition everywhere they went. She is to on the present time the fussiest eater EVER, and they cater to it with information from bringing her "particular" nutrition everywhere they flow. i'm noot saying this can take position to you, yet ingesting table nutrition is honestly a step that the toddler needs to entice close. i might want to point conserving attempting, and at the same time as she does not settle for it,, basically wait slightly and save attempting, because in case you supply in with the puree, she will be able to attend you out everytime and that's a lengthy time period earlier it transformations. attempt distinct issues. My daughter somewhat like truly muffin. a real moist small piece , its a touch sweet , yet not too a lot. I also had solid success with soup, because it has each and each and every of the distinct vegetables and a touch meat and pasta and its cooked high-quality and gentle and has a good flavor. ideal needs. i will guess there are some help blogs on the web with human beings dealing with the same mission today.
2016-12-02 03:30:02
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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Depends on your baby. I gave my baby softer foods. Bananas or cookies that would soften. It helped bring in her teeth faster so I let her go crazy.
Big no no's are peanuts for choking and allergies. Shellfish or fish of any kind because of allergies.
It helps with hand to eye stuff and because I was using sign with her it helped improve her language.
Check with your doctor if you are unsure. Any harder to swallow or tougher foods your baby will need teeth for. But you are just a few months from that. Check out the site I gave you if you need anymore help. It helped me when I need answers about food.
2007-01-11 08:56:40
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Anything she can mash with her jaws should be fine. Gerber has a great line of soft todder foods that do not require teeth but are "grown up food". My little one LOVED the stews and soups and Toddler Meals and still eats them daily now that she has a full mouth of teeth.
2007-01-11 14:59:10
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Oh yeah. Bananas are great to gum. Gerber makes these puffs that are great for gumming. They also make some freeze dried fruit snacks that are disolve quickly in the mouth. Baked potato is really good too.
2007-01-11 08:44:17
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answer #9
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answered by happymommy 4
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i started giving my son gracin mashed potatoes and corn at 9 months old. be careful with corn a lot of babies are allergic to it. also applesauce oatmeal and other soft table or adult foods are okay.
hope that helped
2007-01-11 08:44:34
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answer #10
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answered by McPeyton♥ 1
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