S.S. asks from Attica, NY on July 10, 2008
11 Month Old Will Not Eat Much
My daughter will be 11 months on the 21st. She has been breastfed since she was born and used to to very well with eating baby food. When she started eating mostly baby food during the day she got constipated so I slowed down. Then she did not want to eat baby food at all after that. We keep trying to slowly get her back into eating but she only wants to eat what we are eating. I have tried pretending to take out of my bowl or off my plate but that doesn't fool her. I give her veggies and the healthy stuff but Im worried shes not eating enough. I just bought the highest stage of food. She seemed to like it at first because she can pick it up and put it in her mouth but then wasn't interested. I have talked to her doctor and he wanted me to put her on formula because she started to fall behind and weight and height. He said it wasn't something to be to concerned about though. We have tried the formula and she just chews on the bottle or spits it out. I have tried a sippy cup and that doesn't work either. Is there anything left? please I am open to suggestions. Thank you
So What Happened?™
Hello everyone. Im sorry it has taken me so long to let you all know what has happened. Well I have pretty much given up on the baby food. I still give her some of the fruit ones that she does like. Other than that I have given her anything we have. I just gave her pasta the other night and she LOVED it! Thank you everyone for your input. It was all really helpful. Now I have to try to get her to drink out of a sippy cup. She will not actually suck on it. I just have to keep trying. Thank you again!
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H.L. answers from Syracuse on July 11, 2008
My son was eating what we ate at 10 mos old :-) If that is what she wants, why not give it to her? Does she drink watered down juices or have you tried her with some whole milk? I know they say to start milk at 1 year; she is almost there. Both of my boys were eating from the table by 12 mos and both moved to milk by 12 mos. They both were breastfed and had formula previously.
I think she is telling you she wants something with more substance :-) If constipation is an issue, try other drinks; maybe she thinks formula stinks too :-)
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A.G. answers from New York on July 11, 2008
Give her what what you eat in little tiny pieces. My daughters (both) only ate baby food for about 2 weeks. After that it was whatever we were eating. A.
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A.P. answers from New York on July 11, 2008
It's much better if she eats what the family eats at this stage, for several reasons. She'll develop a more sophisticated and varied palate, and she will develop the oral motor skills she needs, like chewing. There's no reason she needs any baby food anymore.
Also, ignore your doctor about the formula. My doctor hassles me about my son's weight, and said she thinks it's the nursing. (This is after she didn't even ask how often he's nursing, for how long, etc.) No way. I know my child, and he's a picky eater sometimes who takes after my husband's side of the family, who happen to be particularly short and lean.
My doctor backed off a little, then started up again, wanted me to take him to a nutritionist, run digestive tests, etc.
If your doctor does this, get a second opinion. That's what I did. Just remember--you are the mother, and you know what's best for your own child.
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D.G. answers from Albany on July 11, 2008
Pasta "rings" with a little bit of butter and parmigana cheese are tender and easy to pick up. Spaghetti (cut up) with just a little bit on the sauce you are having, in case the acidity bothers her. Pieces of dry toast are good or Gerber "puffs" so she can feed herself. We used to put a puff on our daughters tray and while she was busy trying to pick it up to eat it we would spoon some baby food into her mouth and she would let us. Small bits of cheese and definitely yogurt and cottage cheese. I remember wondering why it was okay for a baby under 1 to have dairy products but not straight milk but it was okay. (obviously you have to watch for a reaction). Bites of pancake and bananna for breakfast with some baby oatmeal cereal w/ cinnamon sprinkled on? Scrambled eggs were a bit hit for us and I was so happy that she was getting some protein too! A yolk every other day is not harmful. Smashed up avacado will add lots of the healthy fat to her diet which may help her gain weight. About the constipation, maybe you can try to add more fruits and veggies and keep offering water in a sippy cup or a very small amount in a small dixie cup if she can hold the cup to her mouth and drink. Water keeps things moving along. The straw cup sounds great too. It's almost time for whole milk so I would just keep breastfeeding until you wean her in a month! Bannanas and applesauce are known to cause constipation so you may want to avoid them. Good luck! (if you keep giving her a sippy cup of water with every feeding eventually she take it...don't give up! : ) )
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H.L. answers from Syracuse on July 11, 2008
My son was eating what we ate at 10 mos old :-) If that is what she wants, why not give it to her? Does she drink watered down juices or have you tried her with some whole milk? I know they say to start milk at 1 year; she is almost there. Both of my boys were eating from the table by 12 mos and both moved to milk by 12 mos. They both were breastfed and had formula previously.
I think she is telling you she wants something with more substance :-) If constipation is an issue, try other drinks; maybe she thinks formula stinks too :-)
1 mom found this helpful
S.R. answers from New York on July 11, 2008
I wish you were in Westchester County, I'm teaching a class for moms of toddlers next week that covers exactly what you're describing.
First and foremost, make sure your 11 month old is not drinking juice! diluted or not, juice has no real nutritional benefits and will take away a child's appetite, give them a sweet tooth and rot their teeth! Give her water to drink.
Second off, there is no need for processed packaged baby food, just feed her what you're eating. We are our kids role models, they will eat what we eat ( sooner or later) so it's important that we are eating great stuff.
One of my favorite books on this topic is Feeding the Whole Family by Cynthia Lair. She'll show you how to cook one meal for both you and baby, no need to be a short order cook or to buy "stages" or any other of that silliness.
Remember, kids are hard wired not to starve! Mother Nature set it up that way!
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J.H. answers from Syracuse on July 11, 2008
Hi S..
Our youngest, now 14 months, was solely on table food by 8 months...she may just be ready...there are tons and tons of food try give her - be creative!!! Cut up small chicken, turkey, pork, hamburger, turkey burger, lamb, avacadoes, lima beans (take out of the pod thing), berries, prickly pear, kiwi...any and all (just about). appleauce, cottage cheese...feel free to ask me for more...I love giving my kids a rainbow of color on their plates!!
As for the formula, we started giving Ava Enfamil Next Step and she loves it...she will still take a bottle, but loves to drink from a straw, also...try a sippy with a straw...
HTH, Best wishes,
J.
R.Q. answers from New York on July 11, 2008
First off, forget the formula. She doesn't need it. Most breast-fed babies plateau when they are around the 9-13 month mark--they appear to "fall behind" according to the charts (which are often normed on formula fed babies BTW) but then they start to pick up again once they meet and are confident with whatever milestone they were working on.
Secondly, have you ever TRIED baby foods? I wouldn't eat them <yuck>:D If you don't feel like you should let your daughter eat what's on your plate you probably shouldn't be eating it either ;-)
Now all teasing aside, there's no reason to try to force or cajole your daughter into eating the baby foods. They are also fortified with iron, which can cause constipation. If she's interested in the food on your plate, make a plate up with the same things you have. My daughter started eating solids around the same age and the only purees she ever had were things meant to be pureed (pesto, hummus, avocado dip, cream soup, and things like that). Everything else has always been whole foods. DDs favorite first food was Indian Curry and Tandori Chicken :D
Keep an eye open for reactions, just like with baby food, but other than that, don't think too much on it--remember babies grew up just fine before the invention of baby food and formula and our great-great grandmothers didn't have time to puree everything in mortars and pestles, before there were food processors :D
Some links for more info:
http://www.tribalbaby.org/babyLedEating.html
http://www.borstvoeding.com/voedselintroductie/vast-voeds...
OOHH they have a new page with specific food suggestions for each child's age:
http://www.borstvoeding.com/voedselintroductie/vast-voeds...
S.H. answers from Rochester on July 11, 2008
We had the same problem when my now 14 month old son was about 10 months old. He just did not like baby food any more. I breastfed until he was one year and started him on table foods when he stopped eating the baby food. We did a lot of vegetables- we just overcooked them and added them to overcooked whole grain pastas, brown rice or whatever type of grain we had in the house. We also cooked ground turkey or beef to add for the protein, but if you are not in to meat I think that yogurt and other dairy work fine, like cottage cheese or other types of cheeses. Fish is also good as long as it is not a kind that would have a high mercury content. We eat tilapia or salmon at least once a week. My son now eats pretty much whatever we put in front of him and can do it rather independently. Have fun with your daughter and her growing sense of independence. It is great to see them develop and learn to do things on their own in such a short amount of time!
A.I. answers from New York on July 11, 2008
I wouldn't worry about it, my mother says that when I was a baby at about that age, I hardly ate anything I weighed so little they took me to specialists who after many tests said that I was fine but that it would work itself out. Then when I was a little under 2, I started eating more and I was fine. (actually I'm dieting now! but then again a little time has passed, I'm 35! :-)
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