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Weaning

Find weaning advice from other Mumsnetters on our Weaning forum. Use our child development calendar for more information.

Apart from honey is there anything I should not feed a nine month old?

34 replies

Chubfuddler · 15/05/2012 12:47

TIA

OP posts:
LadySybilDeChocolate · 15/05/2012 12:50

No wine, coffee, tea, cola, fizzy crap, unpasturised cheese (I think), liver.

Pascha · 15/05/2012 12:51

Shame about the wine.

PestoPenguin · 15/05/2012 12:51

Whole nuts and other choking hazards

PeggyCarter · 15/05/2012 12:51

This reply has been deleted

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Flisspaps · 15/05/2012 12:53

The only things to avoid are:
Honey
Whole grapes
Whole nuts
High salt foods (on a regular basis)

Anything else - eggs, strawberries, shellfish, pickled onions, coq au vin - is absolutely fine Grin

PeggyCarter · 15/05/2012 12:56

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LadySybilDeChocolate · 15/05/2012 12:56

I think the more flavours and textures they are exposed to, the better.

Chubfuddler · 15/05/2012 13:05

Thank you! The wine is all mine.

OP posts:
Flisspaps · 15/05/2012 13:07

Joyful That's the same advice as when DD was weaned 18m ago...

PeggyCarter · 15/05/2012 13:34

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Chubfuddler · 15/05/2012 13:37

I thought cows milk was fine for cooking from six months. That's what I was told five years ago with ds.

OP posts:
complexo · 15/05/2012 13:41

Mc Donalds

StealthPolarBear · 15/05/2012 13:43

a whole crocodile

GobblersKnob · 15/05/2012 13:44

Though half would be fine Stealth Grin

Gin.

PestoPenguin · 15/05/2012 13:52

Latest NHS info on weaning (revised 2009).

As far as I'm aware the guidelines have been the same for all my children, the eldest of whom is 7 years old.

Advised against giving:
raw eggs
shellfish
honey
whole nuts & other choking hazards (e.g. whole grapes, sausage skin)
anything with added salt or sugar
fish with bones
food marketed as 'low fat'
processed food (where possible)
shark, swordfish and marlin

GoPoldark · 15/05/2012 13:54

Have also heard that strawberries can be an allergen and to wait a bit - could be guff. Maybe they just meant in daiquiris.

Flisspaps · 15/05/2012 14:02

Pesto thanks for that - not seen it before!

Will be sticking to just the honey, grapes and nut avoidance myself though.

HobsCobs · 15/05/2012 14:08

Why can't you give them honey? Does it have something awful in it?

You can't give them eggs unless they are cooked until the yolks are hard.

Also, no semi-skimmed or skimmed milk - only full fat!

Seona1973 · 15/05/2012 14:09

cooked shellfish is fine, it says to avoid if it is raw

Seona1973 · 15/05/2012 14:10

honey can cause infant botulism

Flisspaps · 15/05/2012 14:11

HobsCobs risk of botulism which can be fatal - their bodies can't deal with it until they're about one. Cooking doesn't get rid of it either.

Kaloobear · 15/05/2012 14:13

So scrambled egg is fine?

Flisspaps · 15/05/2012 14:16

Ah. That link doesn't say avoid those things, just suggests you remove fish bones and peel/chop/lightly cook veg, and avoid raw shellfish (who eats raw shellfish?!) and shark and marlin - as well as honey, whole nuts and grapes, and high salt food.

Low fat food won't harm a child in moderation - a low fat diet will but that's not the same thing!

Flisspaps · 15/05/2012 14:18

Scrambled egg is fine. I believe the risk is from salmonella in lightly cooked eggs, but all British hens are vaccinated against salmonella so there's no reason why you can't give an under 1 lightly cooked Lion mark eggs.

JenaiMarrHePlaysGuitar · 15/05/2012 14:26

Fliss - oysters! People eat those raw all the time!