Not exact matches
In the first year,
especially, some food
items pose choking hazards and for that reason alone you should avoid
feeding them to your baby.
Living in an urban dwelling
especially means that
feeding items have to be multipurpose, not too harsh on the eye, and able to be adaptable enough for restaurant dining too.
The Born Free name is very well - known,
especially in
feeding items.
Some
items I like to keep stocked at home (I choose organic and local whenever possible): unsweetened, full - fat coconut products (oil, butter, milk, cream); MCT oil; cold - pressed olive oil; grass -
fed beef and jerky; pastured poultry and eggs; wild - caught seafood; seaweed like nori (great for «burritos»); grass -
fed, full - fat, cultured dairy like butter oil, ghee, and heavy whipping cream; raw milk and cheese; fermented cod liver oil; raw nuts and seeds (
especially macadamia nuts) and nut butters; olives; fermented foods like sauerkraut and kimchi; non-starchy vegetables and leafy greens; avocados; low - glycemic berries; lemons and limes; whey protein powder; stevia; apple cider vinegar; sea salt; garlic; onions; mustard; fresh and dried herbs spices (
especially turmeric, cinnamon, and fresh ginger root); salsa; grass -
fed beef and pastured chicken stock and vegetable stock.
Whatever the excuse, a pet store that doesn't sell wild bird
items,
especially feed, is missing out on many easy sales.
Growing rabbits are
especially susceptible to congenital malocclusions and metabolic bone disease if
fed inappropriate, low - calcium food
items early in life.5
In contrast, self - report measures such as the Child
Feeding Questionnaire (48) conceptualize pressure to eat as relatively less assertive, including
items such as, «I have to be
especially careful to make sure my child eats enough.»