Introducing new baby foods
Introducing new baby foods
Acquired tastes
Set them up with healthy habits for life
Introducing your baby to a wide variety of foods when they start weaning will provide them with the nutrients they need to develop and grow healthily. They’ll be more likely to eat a varied diet later on in life too.
Introducing a variety of flavours and nutrients
Introducing your baby to a variety of new foods when they start weaning will help them get all the vitamins, minerals and nutrients they need to grow and develop healthily. It will also mean they are more likely to eat a similarly varied and balanced diet later in life.
Research has shown that mothers who said they’d given their children a variety of baby foods early on in life were less likely to report feeding problems as their children grew older. Furthermore, according to recent studies, a readiness to eat a variety of flavours has the important benefit of increasing the range of nutrients a child consumes.
While babies are born with a preference for sweet foods, other tastes like salty, bitter and sour have to be learned. So by introducing your baby to as many new flavours as possible when they start weaning, you’ll be giving them the opportunity to acquire more new tastes and have a healthier, balanced diet as they grow up.
Of course, your baby may not like new foods straight away. Many parents will abandon a particular food if their baby rejects it just 2 or 3 times. Your baby may only decide they like a particular taste after several attempts so it’s worth persevering for as many as 8–10 times. If your baby continues to reject
It’s also a good idea to offer a variety of tastes during each meal and throughout the day: this has been shown to increase a baby’s acceptance of new foods and tastes. To encourage them, try to include some favourite foods that you know your baby will eat alongside new flavours as often as you can.
Growing up with fruit and vegetables
Fruit and vegetables are excellent sources of vitamins and minerals and should form a key part of a healthy, balanced diet. Despite this, most pre-school children in the EU consume below the recommended levels of fruit and vegetables.
To encourage your baby to grow up eating plenty of fruit and vegetables, persevere in introducing these foods right from the start. Familiarity is key, with research consistently showing that one of the best approaches to getting children to willingly eat fruit and vegetables is to introduce them early. Now is
If at first…
It’s more than likely that your baby will pull a face and refuse a certain type of baby food on their first attempt. More often than not, though, this face will be one of surprise and your baby is simply becoming accustomed to the taste, rather than rejecting it.
Persistence can be the key to helping a baby to fully accept
Practical advice on how to introduce new foods
It’s evident that giving your baby a variety of new tastes during weaning may lead to an increased readiness to accept unfamiliar flavours1. But sometimes theory is easier than practice.
Try following these tips to help your baby learn to love an array of flavours and tastes:
- Timing is important:
- Do introduce new foods when your baby is relaxed, alert and happy – mid-morning is often a good time.
- Don’t introduce new foods when your baby is hungry for milk, or too full after a milk feed. Try offering food
- Offer small amounts of
a new food, and increase the quantity gradually. - Give your baby new food to play with so they can familiarise themselves with it before you try feeding it to them on a spoon. They may end up tasting the food anyway, by putting their fingers in their mouth.
- Let your baby hold the spoon if they want to and guide it into their mouth. Or give them one spoon to experiment with and use another to feed them.
- Make food fun. Be creative and keep your baby interested – make food shapes on their plate and let them enjoy the tactile aspect of their food by playing with it.
- Ensure your baby sees you enjoying a variety of foods too. According to research, babies are more likely to eat foods that they see their mum eating and enjoying.
- Try introducing more than one new food per meal to increase exposure to, and acceptance of, a variety of foods.
- Mix it up. Studies have shown that alternating foods from one day to the next can lead to more success than if you offer the same new food for three days in a row.
- Explore different ways to cook one food. For example, you can mash, boil, roast or fry potatoes, and the texture, taste, colour and size of each is different.
- Don’t pressure your baby to try
a new food . If they reject it, simply try again at a later time. - Family mealtimes are important right from the start. Children who eat with their families tend to enjoy a more nutritionally balanced diet compared to those eating on their own6. Try to arrange your baby’s highchair so that they are sitting with you when you
eat, and start to share mealtimes together as soon as you can.
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Important notice
Breastfeeding is best for babies and provides many benefits. It is important that, in preparation for and during breastfeeding, you eat a varied, balanced diet. Combined breast and bottle feeding in the first weeks of life may reduce the supply of your own breastmilk, and reversing the decision not to breastfeed is difficult. The social and financial implications of using an infant formula should be considered. Improper use of an infant formula or inappropriate foods or feeding methods may present a health hazard. If you use an infant formula, you should follow manufacturer’s instructions for use carefully – failure to follow the instructions may make your baby ill. Always consult your doctor, midwife or health visitor for advice about feeding your baby.
Questions about feeding and nutrition?
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