Getting Started

Starting baby on new foods other than breast milk can be a handful. Make sure you know what you need beforehand.

The Equipment

Baby (but you already knew that!)

Masher

getting-started2

Bib

getting-started3

Child-size, non-toxic plastic fork and spoon

getting-started4

Bowl

It’s safest to use unbreakable, non-toxic utensils for baby. A shallow bowl with sloping sides will be all you need for now.

getting-started5

Strainer

Again, set one aside just for baby’s foods as this may also retain flavours from other foods that pass through it.

getting-started6

Blender

If you can afford it, get a new blender or set one aside just for preparing baby’s food. Food tends to stick to the blender blades, no matter how well we wash them, and you don’t want baby’s food to be tainted by the chillies you blended to make sambal last week.

getting-started8

High chair

Any chair will do, but a high chair puts baby at a comfortable height for you to feed him, and he can’t fall or climb out of it easily.

getting-started7

Plastic sheet(s) and old newspapers

Use these to line the floor around baby’s chair. If you think this is unnecessary, you must not have let your baby feed himself before.

The Vocabulary

How do you know which method to use to prepare baby’s foods? Here’s a quick list of preparation methods and the foods they work best with.

Method What is it? Recommended foods to start with
Boiling Heating liquid (usually water) with solid food placed in itgetting-started9
  • Boil vegetables (eg carrot, spinach, celery) to make vegetable stock that can be added to porridge
  • Not recommended for vegetables to be eaten, as nutrients will be lost in the water
Steaming Heating a stack of containers, the lowest of which contains watergetting-started10
  • Harder fruits and vegetables, eg pumpkin and apple
Mashing “Squashing” soft food with a fork or masher until it turns into a smooth pastegetting-started11
  • Banana, steamed pumpkin, potato or sweet potato, peas, carrot, cauliflower
  • If the texture is too firm for baby in the beginning, add some expressed breast milk when mashing
Pureeing Using a blender to turn food into a soft, runny pastegetting-started12
  • Steamed apple, pumpkin, cauliflower
  • Add boiled water or expressed breast milk to make the texture “wetter”
Juicing Extracting the juice from fruits and vegetables by blending with water, then straining the fibre out and leaving the liquidgetting-started13
  • Orange, apple, watermelon

Subscribe to our parenting newsletter.

Comments