14 answers

Solids & Breastfeeding

Two questions, my son is 7.5 months old and has been eating some solids since he was about 5.5 months old. He now eats sweet potatoes, squash, carrots, green beans, peas, apples, pears, and bananas. I make all his food so are there any other foods we can introduce yet?
Also how long did you moms breastfeed your little ones. I know 1 year is recommended but I just want to know how long some of you moms made it.

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More Answers

I also made all my own baby food. I used a few websites that I found to be super helpful:
http://www.homemade-baby-food-recipes.com/index.html
http://www.wholesomebabyfood.com/
This one has daily recipes: http://weelicious.com/about/

And I also used the book Super Baby Food. It gave great guidelines too. I pretty much introduced everything early on. Some people wait on a few things like strawberries and tomatoes and citrus (acidic on their tummies, and strawberries can aggravate eczema) so I just did those closer to a year. Making your own food it takes forever to work through all the veggies available. The jarred stuff doesn't have near the variety that you can do on your own. I started yogurt (plain whole milk with fresh fruit added- no sugar that way) at about 9 mos I think. Those websites give good age guidelines as well as good combinations to make it more interesting.

I am just now weaning my 27 month old. He cut down to one nursing a day at about 18 mos because I started working again, then just gradually stopped asking for the morning nursing on his own at about 20 mos. He still asks for it about once a week or so. I try to distract and redirect, but I'm not going to tell him no for a while yet. I think the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends 2 yrs now. (I could be wrong though). But one thing to keep in mind, after about a year or 15 mos, breastfeeding wont be nearly the time consuming affair that it is now. Nursing will be quicker because they will be wanting to explore the world. You might find yourself wanting to nurse still because it will be a chance to cuddle your rambunctious toddler. I remember food and nursing being pretty much the only thing occupying my time when he was littler, now it is just a few minutes of my time. Nursing is what you make of it. I am glad I didn't wean at a year like I originally planned.

Well... my answer is going to be WAY more simplistic than others'... but here is a list of what we fed in addition to what you are already feeding...

Avacado (this was actually our daughters 1st solid after cereal, recommended by our pediatrician)
Peaches
YoBaby yogurt
Semolina Pasta (Earth's Best, organic)
Potato

BTW - we made her cereal with breastmilk

Congrats on getting this far.

I made it 1 year with my son - he weaned himself about 2 weeks after his 1st birthday. I made it 12 weeks with my daughter (had planned on a year as well, but chemo made the decision for me).

You may want to check with your pediatrician to see what the American Academy of Pediatrics currently recommends, but when we took our daughter to her 1 year well-baby visit last March, we were told there is NOTHING they can't have as long as there's not a known familial food allergy or it poses a choking risk.

At 7.5 months, we were feeding very thingly shaved lunch meats (ham, turkey), cottage cheese, yogurt, cheese slices (we prefer the ones from the deli to the individually wrapped ones), cooked frozen veggies, etc.

My goal for BF'ing intially was 6 months, but my only reasons to stop were selfish. I was a working mom, and that was really hard pumping in my car multiple times/day as a traveling sales rep. But, I made it, and my son has been thriving ever since.

Here's a link to a parenting site by the American Academy of Pediatrics that may help you:
http://www.healthychildren.org/English/ages-stages/baby/f...

Go to wholesomebabyfoods.com (someone may have already suggested this...sorry!). They have a great age appropriate list you can use. I made my dd's food too. She nursed until 18 months.

I second avocados. You can mix them with bananas too. That was my son's favorite. And don't worry when they tell you that you can't freeze it. It freezes fine, just turns brown, but the kids don't notice or care.

You can add some blueberries into some of the mixes, white potatoes, I think I got most of my ideas by going to the grocery store and seeing what the companies put in their mixes.

For breastfeeding, I was able to go 14.5 months before my husband said that he needed me back.

Try avocados! My son was crazy about them, and it's so easy to mash an avocado with a fork. It's also easy if you're out for dinner with your baby, as most restaurants have avocado. They are super healthy, too.

I breastfed my son for 19 or 20 months. My goal was two years (as recommended by the World Health Organization) but I got pregnant when he was 16 months old, and we stopped when it got uncomfortable for me. I'm now nursing my five month-old daughter.

You've gotten some wonderful answers so far, but I didn't read all of them so I'm sorry if I'm repeating! Avocado and banana mixed together were a hit for my little guy. Yogurt was (and still is) on his hit list also. We use Earth's Best jarred food also. I made all his food at first, but he wasn't too crazy about the meat dishes I was making for him. He's 15 months now and still all about the boobie! I'm letting him tell me when he's ready to wean.

My 6.5 month old son eats the following (that I make myself too!!) Butternut and Acorn squash, Avocado, banana, apple, pear, carrots, sweet potatoes, peas, green beans. My pediatrician said that at this stage - he can eat any fruit or veggie that I can fit in my food processor! I have a great cookbook - Williams Sonoma Cooking for Baby (http://www.williams-sonoma.com/products/cooking-for-baby-.... I have also used this website as a guide for foods - (http://www.wholesomebabyfood.com/) He has two bottom teeth and we are still nursing - I plan to nurse until he is a year (but if I can't - I have enough frozen breastmilk stored up)

Congrats to you on making the food! I love it!!!

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