Weaning can be a very exciting time for parents, but it can also carry an element of uncertainty if you have never done it before. We caught up with Theresa and Nicola at Happy Tums for their top tips to get you prepared before you start your weaning journey.
As parents, our instinct is to nourish our children, from the moment we found out we were pregnant, we were suddenly responsible for their growth and development. Weaning is no different. We want to make sure we do this right. We want to make sure they have the best foods and get the best nutrient intake to help them to grow and develop and be as healthy as possible.
I bet you are all thinking, how is it that my baby is ready for solid foods?! Maybe it feels as though you have only just mastered milk feeds and now you have to think about this next milestone. This can certainly feel quite daunting but it really doesn’t have to be. These top tips will hopefully give you the confidence to start introducing solids when the time is right for your baby.
The issue is that the internet contains an abundance of information on the “best” way to wean your baby and the information is not always correct, reliable or even safe. Anyone can claim to be an “expert” in how to feed children and therefore we are constantly exposed to opinions, a lack of safe information and ambiguity. So, before you start to wean your baby, get your information from a trusted health professional who has the correct qualifications and knowledge and who is associated with a regulatory body. This will be a registered Nutritionist or a Dietician and not your mother-in-law or neighbour next door who claims to know what is best! Happy Tums run Weaning Workshops online and face-to-face.
Gather all of the equipment you might need before you get started. These are the things we used ourselves when we weaned our own babies:
Stock up on essentials for your store cupboard. These are foods which will enable you to make a whole range of meals and snacks which are nutritious and healthy. See here for our blog on store cupboard essentials.
Choose a highchair which has a foot rest. It really does help your baby to sit up safely and helps them to enjoy the eating experience without trying to keep themselves from sliding around! If they are slightly wobbly still, then it is fine to prop them up with cushions or highchair inserts. Giving them a foot rest helps to keep their core muscles strong and supportive. We love a Stokke Tripp Trapp at Happy Tums. If you don’t have a highchair with a foot rest, you can always put a box under their feet to give them a surface area to rest their feet on.
Buy a few soft flannels to wipe their faces. Weaning is messy! And if you are wiping their faces constantly with wet wipes, this will start to possibly irritate their sensitive skin. So after a lovely messy meal is over, just use a soft flannel with warm water to clean those gorgeous cheeks!
There are no published guidelines on portion sizes anywhere and this is because all babies are different. Like adults, we don’t sit down at the same time every day and eat the same amount of food – neither will our little ones. Just like us, babies have differing energy needs, appetites, and metabolisms and all these things impact how much they eat at that meal on that day.
Batch cook if you are puree feeding and store in ice-cream trays. Freeze leftovers where possible and label well!
You can also bake things like muffins, savoury flapjacks, pancakes and porridge fingers and freeze on a tray separately. Once frozen, remove from the tray and put back into the freezer in sealed sandwich bags. You can then remove one at a time and these can form the basis of any meal or snack.
Buy very low salt stock cubes and unsalted butter. By making these two simple changes, you can really help reduce the salt content of your baby’s diet. Replace any normal stock cubes and salted butter that you currently use for these options and this is a very quick and easy swap to help keep salt levels down.
Get a dog! They save a lot of cleaning up!
But, seriously – enjoy it. Welcome the mess and do it at your baby’s pace, there is no rush and no judgement.