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Home-made baby food in the news.

34 replies

JJsandcat · 12/10/2009 15:52

women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/article6868342.ece#

I do agree with the logic behind it. Good job I never really bothered and went straight for Plum and Ella's kitchen, only cooking stuff myself very sporadically.

What are your thoughts?

PS: This is NOT a slight to all the great Mums out there who cook so well for their LOs, I just couldn't do it and I'm tired of being berated for it.

OP posts:
LynetteScavo · 12/10/2009 15:56

Not exactly news, is it?

I only ever fed organic food to my babies,the eldest is now 10.5yo, whether it was home made, or shop bought.

JJsandcat · 12/10/2009 16:00

Well, you wouldn't believe how many dirty looks and snidey comments I received from other mums in baby groups, even friends, for feeding my LO out of a pot. I never criticized them but an innocuous pot of Plum had them frothing at the mouths.

OP posts:
belgo · 12/10/2009 16:00

I've even been known to feed my babies non organic food from a jar. Smells gross though.

JJsandcat · 12/10/2009 16:01

I just think it's everyone's own business but I really dislike the 'holier than thou' attitude of some.

OP posts:
thisisyesterday · 12/10/2009 16:02

so, basically someone who works for a baby food company wants us to buy more of her baby food?

cos like, we can't just buy organic foodright?

and read the last paragraph. that makes more sense to me.

i wouldn't take this as any indication that pre-prepared food is better or as good as home made.
they must surely lose a fair bit of goodness being ultra heat treated for example??

sarah293 · 12/10/2009 16:03

This reply has been deleted

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thisisyesterday · 12/10/2009 16:03

"Even so, Mole says, cooking organic vegetables at home is still the superior option for parents. Second best, he says, is learning which foods have high residues."

LynetteScavo · 12/10/2009 16:03

That is shocking Belgo!

I hope you only did it in the privacy of your own home.

Re-heating (and keeping food cool)when out and about is a pain, though, jars are so much easier, andcan be eaten...cold.

belgo · 12/10/2009 16:05

not only cold, but straight from the jar!

belgo · 12/10/2009 16:05

saves on washing up!

thisisyesterday · 12/10/2009 16:05

well i never needed to heat food when out.

not sure why homemade fgood can't be eaten cold but jar food can???
mine just got a sandwich and a banana!

HeadFairy · 12/10/2009 16:05

ds always hated jars, absolutely disgusted by them which was such a pain, it would have been lovely to have been able to just pop open a jar every now and then!

HeadFairy · 12/10/2009 16:06

ds always hated jars, absolutely disgusted by them which was such a pain, it would have been lovely to have been able to just pop open a jar every now and then!

Reallytired · 12/10/2009 16:19

I don't cook for my baby I cook for my family. It is just as important what I feed my son as my baby daughter.

Parents are made to feel insecure as a diliberate marketing ploy.

Anyway there are no suitable baby foods for baby led weaning.

sarah293 · 12/10/2009 16:23

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ADragonIs4LifeNotJustHalloween · 12/10/2009 16:25

"Rather than berate mothers, maybe they should be berating the food industry that allows all this crap to be sprayed on fruit and vegetables?"

Agree.

"jars are so much easier, and can be eaten...cold."

Is there some reason you think homemade food can't be eaten cold?? Or straight from the pot?? Bizarre.

As an aside, those pouches from Ella's kitchen can be squirted directly into your baby's mouth without need for spoon or jar. Allegedly. [cough]

Itsjustafleshwound · 12/10/2009 16:25

I think it is just another way to dress up the issue that organic food has had its day and is no better for anybody than the bog standard stuff ...

Thankfully both my DC are over the weaning stage and I do admit that there were times that I was quite grateful to have a bottle on standby when we had days from hell ...

hocuspontas · 12/10/2009 16:32

Why are we encouraged to buy stuff in plastic containers and pouches when homemade food doesn't add to landfill?

LynetteScavo · 12/10/2009 16:35

ADragonIs4Life, if baby food contains chicken,for example, it really need to be kept cold for health and safely reasons. A jar can be kept at room temperature, or even at nice warm car temperature.

I don't know why I'm even posting on this thread - baby weaning is my least favourite topic ever, and I never intend to wean a baby again. Also, I could't give a stuff what anybody else chooses to feed their baby.(Within reason, obviously)

Mine had mostly homemade, as I enjoyed cooking for them (I still love making apple puree,and vegetable soup, but then maybe I'm wierd), and also the odd pot of commercial stuff. Always organic.

thedollshouse · 12/10/2009 16:37

I would never berate any mother for using jars, I have more important things to worry about. However I was slightly annoyed by this article and I don't strictly agree with it. I homemade nearly everything when ds was a baby because I enjoyed doing it and it gave me something to do. Always used organic ingredients. There wasn't the range of alternatives that there is these days, it was all heinz and farley gloopy products, manufacturers like Ellas Kitchen and Babylicious were not readily available then.

I am pregnant again and am planning on homemaking most of the babies meals but I was thinking of using non organic products because they are cheaper and there has been quite a lot of research that suggests that organic isn't necessarily any better, I'm not as convinced of the benefits of organic food as I was a few years ago.

I will supplement by babies diet with food from some of the latest ranges to make life easier when I am in a rush but the bulk of the food will be home made.

I'm annoyed that this article was presented as "news" when clearly it is nothing more than an advertising ploy by the manufacturers of organic baby food products. If anything it puts me off buying their products as I don't appreciate scaremongering.

PoisonToadstool · 12/10/2009 16:39

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

AtheneNoctua · 13/10/2009 06:11

I don't know. What does OFSTED say? Do you think we should be trusted to cook food on our own without some kind of nanny state fee paying license and barage of background checks on not onlyus but all of the people who worked on the farm that grew the food?

thedollshouse · 13/10/2009 10:10

Its just a matter of time Athene.

3littlefrogs · 13/10/2009 10:15

I am so thankful I had my first child 20 years ago. I just cooked everything without salt - they had what we were having, just squished up a bit, until they didn't need it squished.

overmydeadbody · 13/10/2009 10:19

F8cking ridiculous.

Just another tihng to confuse parents out there and make us spend more money.

Next they'll be insisiting on regular environmental health inspections of our kitchens if we dare to cook for our own children

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