Starting Baby Solids: A Feeding Guide for 4-6 Months
After working so hard to master breastfeeding, introducing solids was a little intimidating. There are so many options, methods and conflicting advice out there that I was overwhelmed. My babygroup leader and my pediatrician never seemed to say the same thing! I however polled a lot of other moms and did some of my own research to come up with what I felt was a suitable time to start for Aurora.
I also heard that Feeding Littles, an online tutorial, is very useful in helpings parents to navigate the best solid food choices for their little ones. I haven’t tried it yet but so many friends rave about it!
We first tried solids at exactly 4 months. She was holding her head up well but could not sit up unassisted. We sat her in a baby Bumbo seat and started with only purées. The first attempt was pretty good! She seemed interested and surprised and would open up her mouth for more.
So far the only food she very much hasn’t liked is plain greek yogurt! But if I mix in a fruit, she loves it!
Allergens
We started with one ingredient foods and continued the food one to two times per day for 3 days to make sure that she didn’t have an allergy. The 3 day rule is because sometimes they don’t show an allergy right away.
We were told to introduce allergens (Dairy, Egg and Nuts) early, so we made sure to expose Aurora to each of these at least once per week and have continued that to now. There is conflicting advice on this but we decided this was the best route for us, after researching and talking it over with our pediatrician.
There is also an option to add these allergens to the baby’s bottles in a powder form, called Ready, Set, Food. I didn’t go this route as she doesn’t have bottles consistently but I have heard very good things.
Baby Solids at 4 Months
We decided to start with only purées. I was not making homemade food at this point since she only was just starting to eat and eating very little. I decided to wait till she was eating more in quantity before I went the homemade route as that’s a lot of time and energy to be wasting most of it. The brands that I used were HappyBaby, Earthganics, Peter Rabbit and Plum Baby.
However now, I wish I had known about YUMI and Once Upon a Farm, both are fresh and require refrigeration and in my opinion, better than the shelf brands (which need preservatives to stay fresh).
- HappyBaby Oatmeal mixed with Breastmilk
- Very thin consistency
- Avocado
- Smashed and mixed with breastmilk
- Sweet Potatoes
- Winter Squash
- Peas
- Carrots
Baby Solids at 5 Months:
- Egg Yolk
- Scrambled and mixed with breastmilk
- Broccoli
- Smashed with a fork
- Peanut butter
- mixed with breastmilk
- Prunes
- Pears
- Banana
- Jarred & smashed
- Full Fat Greek Yogurt
Baby Solids at 6 Months:
- Strawberry
- Raspberry
- Blueberry
- Blackberry
- Whole Eggs
- Scrambled with whites
- Steak
- Filet mignon pieces
- Salmon
- Flaked pieces
- Cheese
- Mozzarella, Cheddar and other mild cheeses
- Kiwi
- Mango
- Melon
- Pineapple
Solids While Traveling
Aurora was 6 months old when we traveled for 3 weeks for Christmas and it was during this time that we started using more puree pouches as it was much easier on the go than trying to spoon feed. Aurora loves to suck right out of the pouches!
We found the fewest ingredient pouches and stuck with those (ie. Sweet Potatoes, Prunes, Applesauce) but we did graduate to some combinations as she approached 7 months.
I tried to be mindful of each pouch’s ingredients to make sure she was only being exposed to ONE new ingredient each time. For instance, if the pouch was apple, squash and blueberry, I made sure that she had already tried apple and squash so I would know if she had an allergy to blueberry.
Foods to Avoid
- Honey
- Milk
- Added Salt
- Added Sugars
- Juice
- Too Much Water
- 2 oz per day is recommended as a maximum
- The worry is that they will fill up on water over breastmilk
Conclusions
Since we do a mix of baby led weaning and purées, I can tell that Aurora prefers to feed herself. She loves chunks of food and holding the spoon, though it can get messy in both cases!
However you decide to do it, is great! Just be sure to remember that breastmilk or formula should still be pretty much the only source of nutrition as this stage.