Go with baby cereal or mashed or pureed vegetables or fruit to begin with.
Not exact matches
The study
goes on to suggest that this switch to bottles, especially
with added
cereal, is often done in an effort to help
baby sleep longer so that perhaps mom can catch up on her sleep, too.
I wish i can post a video of my chat
with my cutie, he will be four months in less than 3 days from this writing and although he has been on formula since he was born, i felt like introducing something solid even if he has to eat it once per day, i have read so much about
babies and solid food and have made a hell of research and
gone through so many
baby food, reading every content and realized that the best bet is from six months.However research also showed me that in between 4plus that a
baby is good to
go, have been thinking about the best solid to start
with until i saw the above content, sure i will start
with rice
cereal if not cimilac anyway.
Anyway, the trend in the US is to offer only one thing (and people usually start
with the totally disgusting rice
cereal, which by now everyone knows I hate and think people should skip and
go straight to bananas or avocado or something orange instead) for a few days because then you'll know if the
baby is allergic to it before you move on to something else.
we have a 4-1/2 month old and we've been slowly introducing the
baby solids to him since he demanded more and more formula (which has been for about 2 months now) everyone told me to start him on rice
cereal, we tried it and to this day it still messes his little tummy up for a few days (even though i» monly feeding him a tsp full of it
with his applesauce) as far as the
baby purees
go he only eats applesauce, so i decided to skip the
baby applesauce and just buy the regular natural applesauce (much more — 75 % less cost wise) he loves it... i think he likes it better than the
baby stuff!
No way was I
going to pump and thicken his milk
with rice
cereal; I wanted my
baby to get breast milk, and I wanted to make sure he was
going to get it directly from the source.
Consult your pediatrician, and, if you get the
go - ahead, start introducing fortified
baby cereals with milk into your
baby's diet, and later pureed meat, vegetables and fruit.