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recipie that uses pork fillet for 10 month old please anyone?

18 replies

Heathcliffscathy · 30/08/2004 12:05

want to do a batch of something. anyone know a failsafe babies love it recipie?

tia

OP posts:
Yorkiegirl · 30/08/2004 12:28

Message withdrawn

SenoraPostrophe · 30/08/2004 12:29

I take baby recipes a lot less seriously than anyone else I think, but I used to make this for dd:

fry some onions. Or don't if you haven't got any. Maybe ad some garlic. I use olive oil because it's the only "natural" oil (you just squeeze olives to get it - other veg oils require nasty industrial processes).

Meanwhile boil up lots of carrots, parsnips, butternut squash or other sweet veg along with some other veg (broccoli, beans, cabbage, whatever) with a few potatoes.

then fry up a bit of pork (cut small), mash the veg and mix together - I used to whizz the whole lot up, but you don't have to. As long as you have enough of the sweet veg in there, babies love it!

Heathcliffscathy · 30/08/2004 12:53

thanks you two. anyone else?

OP posts:
suzywong · 30/08/2004 13:15

I'd go with SP's recipe but maybe a bit of canned tomatoes with the onions and some broken up cooked spaghetti in the final mix if bub's in to texture.

In fact that reminds me, I must make some more baby food but DS2 adores MIL's chinese rice porridge and begs for noodles every time he sees a chopstick. I am becoming very lazy.

SenoraPostrophe · 30/08/2004 13:50

yes - often do pasta instead of potatoes - it freezes a bit better if you do that.

dd used to get the runs a bit with apples at that age - I haven't dared to give them to ds yet. A bit of peach (just bunged in with the veg) works OK though.

JanH · 30/08/2004 14:00

SP, I love your recipe style -

Could we work up a Nigella-type book around "don't include X if you haven't got any"?

SenoraPostrophe · 30/08/2004 14:04

janh - my new big idea is to make a christmas book called "how to be a domestic slut" (dp says - "write what you know" ) what do you think?

problem is lots of people only know the word slut in a sexual sense, but I think it'll work.

SenoraPostrophe · 30/08/2004 14:06

lots of media types read this. Does it count as a copywrite notice if I add (c)2004 SenoraPostrophe?

SenoraPostrophe · 30/08/2004 14:06

copyright.

JanH · 30/08/2004 14:07

I've had the same trouble with the word slut - it does raise eyebrows! How about slob? Or slattern? Or sloven? (Is that a noun?) Would be happy to help write it - I'm quite an expert in the field.

suzywong · 30/08/2004 14:08

slattern gets my vote

SenoraPostrophe · 30/08/2004 14:12

slovern! unfortunately it's not a word, but it obviously should be.

Seriously - I think we should put together some recipes (I haven't got enough) and see if we can find an agent.

SenoraPostrophe · 30/08/2004 14:13

10% of profits to mumsnet?

JanH · 30/08/2004 14:14

"How small does a piece of cheese have to be before you can't cut the mould off it any more?" Discuss.

SenoraPostrophe · 30/08/2004 14:17

"how long after the best before date can you realistically eat things?"

hoxtonchick · 30/08/2004 14:18

A bit of mould does wonders for a child's immune system...

SenoraPostrophe · 30/08/2004 14:19

so does picking their nose and eating it, apparently. dd has the first bit (picking) down pat, but doesn't do the second.

Maybe I should come up with some recipes?

JanH · 30/08/2004 14:20

Mud can be quite nutritious too.

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