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FEEDING THE NINE- TO TWELVE-MONTH-OLD
By baby's first birthday, solid foods make up around fifty percent of her
nutrition. Continue to feed most solid foods to your baby by spoon, since you
are likely to get more food into baby's mouth than on the floor. Yet, if your
baby is the "do it myself" type, finger foods may be the
main fare by this time.
Here are some tips gleaned from the Sears, family-feeding experiences, as
well as tips shared by patients in our pediatric practice.
Keep feeding times short. Remember, tiny babies still have tiny tummies.
Small, frequent feedings are still the best. Also, give your baby small
helpings. Most babies seldom take more than 1 or 2 tablespoons of a food at any
one meal .
Don't overwhelm baby with a whole pile of food on her plate. Begin with a small
dollop and add more as baby wants more.
Give your baby a bone. Our babies have enjoyed a chicken leg bone with all
the tiny bone slivers removed and a small amount of cooked meat remaining.
Beginning around nine months, babies love to hold this bone like a rattle, gnaw
on it, bang it, transfer it from hand to hand, teethe on it, and play with it.
They even, occasionally, eat a little chicken.
Pressure tactics make feeding harder, not easier. Don't force-feed food, as
this could create long-term unhealthy attitudes about eating. The parent's role
is to select nutritious foods, prepare them well, and serve them creatively,
matched to baby's individual capabilities and preferences. Baby's role is to
eat the amount he wants at the time, according to his needs, moods,
capabilities, and preferences. We have taught all of our children to swim, and
we think of feeding similar to teaching swimming -- being neither over-
protective nor over-restrictive. Allow a child to explore and experiment.
Allow a certain amount of mess, but don't let it get out of control. Above all,
teach your child that food is to be enjoyed.
Expect erratic feeding habits. There may be days when your baby eats solids
six times, or she may refuse solids three days in a row and only want to
breastfeed or take a bottle.
Understand that food fears are normal. To help your
baby overcome these fears, take a bite of an unfamiliar food first and let your
baby catch the spirit of your enjoyment. Expect baby to explore a new food
before she eats it -- just like adults want to know what they're eating. One
way to encourage the cautious feeder is to take a bite of the new food yourself.
Then place some food on his index finger and guide his own fingerful of food
into his mouth.
Gradually increase variety and texture. For the youngest eaters, fruits and
vegetables should be strained. (If you wait until six months to start solids,
you'll probably skip this stage.) As babies gain eating experience, they can
advance to pureed foods, then foods that are finely minced. Most babies can
begin to accept chopped foods by one year of age.
Settle the squirmer. Here is a toy trick that worked for one of our babies
who would constantly windmill her arms during feeding. Use three plastic spoons
– one spoon for each of her hands to occupy them and one for you to feed her.
Also, try this toy trick. Put toys with suction cups on a highchair tray so she
can play with them with her hands while you sneak food into her mouth.
Sometimes when babies open their mouths to suck on toys, this primes them to
open their mouths to receive food.
Use camouflage. Cover more nutritious, but less favorite foods with one of
baby's favorites. We often place a thin layer of applesauce over the vegetables
or meat. Get the applesauce (or other favorite) on baby's tongue first and then
put a scoop of the more nutritious, but less liked food, on top of it.
Let baby eat off your plate. Sometimes babies just don't want to eat like a
baby, neither baby food nor off baby plates. Around one year of age, babies
enjoy sitting on parents' laps and picking food off their plate, especially
mashed potatoes and cooked, soft vegetables. Or, put baby's food on your plate
and trick the little gourmet into eating his own food.
Let baby enjoy the lap of luxury. If your child refuses to get in or stay in
his high-chair, let him sit on your lap and eat off your plate. If baby begins
messing with your food, place a few morsels of food on the table between baby
and plate to direct his attention away from your dinner.
Overcome lip lock. To relax tight lips from refusing a feeding, back off and
over-enjoy the food yourself. Model the excitement by replaying the old
reliable "Mmmmmm goooood!" As your baby watches you open your mouth and savor
the food, he may catch the spirit and relax his mouth and his attitude. Use one
of your child's favorite foods as a teaser. As he opens his mouth for his
favorite food, quickly follow with the food you wanted him to try.
Minimize the mess. Too much food on a baby's dish leads to two-fisted eating
and major mess-making. Encourage neatness by scattering only a few morsels of
finger foods on baby's tray at a time and refill as necessary.
Each new developing skill has its nutritional benefits and humorous
nuisances. Baby's newly developing thumb and forefinger pincer grasp and finger
pointing stimulates him to want to pick up tiny morsels of food and feed
himself, yet it also creates an opportunity for more messes. Allow baby the
luxury of messing around a bit with his newly-discovered utensils. Believe it
or not, baby is actually learning from this mess, sort of like the conclusion
that the author Ernest Hemmingway came to: "Oh, the joy of just messing around."
While some food makes its way into the mouth, other pieces scatter. Food-
flinging , dropping, and smearing is a usual mealtime
antic parents can expect to deal with. To discourage flinging and give the food
a fighting chance to make it into baby's mouth, put a few pieces of O-cereals,
cooked carrots, pieces of rice cakes, and any other bite-size pieces of fruits
and vegetables that baby likes on his plate. Then, refill as needed. Placing
a whole pile of food in front of baby is inviting a mess. We have noticed that
our babies are fascinated with a pile of cooked spaghetti placed within easy
reach. The ability to pick up with the thumb and forefinger enables baby to
pick up one strand at a time. Spaghetti-picking holds baby's mealtime attention
longer than most foods. Expect food and utensils to become interesting objects
to pick up, bang, drop, and fling, which is part of baby's natural desire to
explore and find new uses for his hands. (See Feeding at a Glance:
Birth to 24 Months)
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