36 answers

Homemade Baby Food - Hillsdale,IL

Hello ladies - I was just wondering if anyone out there has any adivce on making your own baby food. I have not yet searched the web - I decided I would try here first. With my other son - I always bought his - but I would like to try it myself this time do to cost & nutrition. If you have any advice on how it worked for you & do you recommened any web-sites or books?
Any help is apreciated! Thanks!

2 moms found this helpful

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

Super Baby Food is a great book by Yaren (forgot first name!?!?) I don't have time to write more now, but I fed both my girls homemade babyfood and would love to answer any specific questions you had. Feel free to e-mail me.

2 moms found this helpful

Hi- I read through and saw that you have received lots of info so I won't repeat any, but one tip I have is to make the baby food and then put into a gallon Zip Loc bag. Then snip one tip off (to make like a frosting bag) and then squirt onto wax/parchment paper. Then stick that into the freezer and when it is frozen you just pop them off and stick in freezer zip loc bags.

By doing it this way there is little clean up needed, and you can make as much as you want at a time (instead of only making the amount of ice cube trays that you have). They are easier to thaw out too because they look like a cookie and are spread out and an ice cube is more dense.

2 moms found this helpful

Good for you! As everyone else has mentioned, it's super easy and much cheaper! I loved www.wholesomebabyfood.com.

The next step is cloth diapers! :)

Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

More Answers

J., I have always made baby food. It's so easy.
Pick the vegetables you'd like to start with. Cook or
steam the vegetable. Put in blender with maybe a little
water or stock to blend easily. Put in individual ice cube trays,
cover and freeze. When you wish to feed the baby, take
a cube of veg. out ahead of time. Teething babies love
to suck on the veggie cube when you hold it for them.
Put a cube in a small container when you have to feed away
from home. And remember, babies don't need salted or
sugared food. DONT add it to the veggies and this is the
taste the baby expects.

Of course you can do this with pudding, jello, and anything else you can think of.
Have fun being creative and saving lots of money. More
importantly, your baby is getting off to a great start with
no additives in the food.
Enjoy this time with your baby.
S. T.

2 moms found this helpful

Hi- I read through and saw that you have received lots of info so I won't repeat any, but one tip I have is to make the baby food and then put into a gallon Zip Loc bag. Then snip one tip off (to make like a frosting bag) and then squirt onto wax/parchment paper. Then stick that into the freezer and when it is frozen you just pop them off and stick in freezer zip loc bags.

By doing it this way there is little clean up needed, and you can make as much as you want at a time (instead of only making the amount of ice cube trays that you have). They are easier to thaw out too because they look like a cookie and are spread out and an ice cube is more dense.

2 moms found this helpful

I have made baby food with all 3 of my children. Cook the fruits and veggies on the stove or microwave. Then, put them in the blender with a little water. I usually make enough that I can freeze (in ice cube trays) for later. I still bought jarred foods so I would know the texture and thickness of the foods. As your little one grows and has a better ability of chewing, you do not have to blend the food all the way. Good luck and have fun.

2 moms found this helpful

Dear J.--

I fed my now 20 month old only baby food I made. Benefits were huge, and she now eats nearly everything we eat. Two books were super helpful, both by British author Annabel Karmel. She has several books for babies and toddlers, and the recipes are quick, easy, and taste good enough for moms to not mind tasting them too! Beware, however...once you start down this path, your baby will not eat Gerbers again!

Good luck!

2 moms found this helpful

Super Baby Food is a great book by Yaren (forgot first name!?!?) I don't have time to write more now, but I fed both my girls homemade babyfood and would love to answer any specific questions you had. Feel free to e-mail me.

2 moms found this helpful

I use a handheld blender (also called immersion blender) to puree whatever we're having for dinner. That makes it easier to give my babies a variety (assuming, of course, that WE are eating a healthy variety -- I suppose I need to work on that more :) ).

2 moms found this helpful

Hi J.,

I would buy frozen vegetables and steam them and then puree them (or whatever texture you are looking for) in the blender. I would then pour into ice cube trays and freeze, pop out and put into a freezer bag after frozen. I would also make apple/chicken which my daughter loved. Portion is one cooked apple (dice and boil) to one cooked chicken breast (dice and boil) - blend to desired consistency in the blender. Bananas, apple, pears, peaches, etc. are all super easy to blend up in the blender, too. Spaghetti - if you are making it for the rest of the family, blend some up in the blender - adding a little water if needed. You can feed him whatever you are eating if you blend it up.

Check with your pediatrician first - I know mine didn't recommend anything but breast milk until my DD was 6 months.

Good luck!

2 moms found this helpful

I made baby food for both my kids. I boiled or steamed everything and used my food processor and it seemed to work fine. I didn't see the point in investing in a fancy machine to process baby food when I already had a nice food processor (I might be cheap, but the cost just didn't make sense to me). The only food that I couldn't seem to get to a nice smooth consistency was carrots, so I did buy jars of carrots at first and then once they were ready for a little coarser food, I served them my own version. Once they were ready for the casseroles and meat dishes, I didn't puree much. I just hand chopped the food to a size more manageable for the kids. I did try the jar versions at first with my son and got part of three jars of it spit back at me. So I just cooked as normal, but didn't add much seasoning until after I took out enough for the kids. It made my life easier because I didn't have to cook separate meals for kids and DH and I. Best of luck.

1 mom found this helpful

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.