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Weaning

7month meal day plan - ok?

29 replies

sparker22 · 13/10/2013 22:22

planning my DD's menu for tomorrow... still fairly new to BMW and hope I'm getting it right.

OK so here's tomorrow's planned menu, what do people think?

Breakfast:
Eggy bread
Fruit puree pot


Lunch:
fresh Strawberries/banana
Fromage frais (pud)


Dinner:
Roasted butternut squash
Roasted carrot
heinz Biscotti biscuit (pud)

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sparker22 · 15/10/2013 22:27

I've not really been told anything, pretty much all of my blw knowledge is from Google of mumsnet (thank God for both! Lol)

I bought some quinoa today so will try that tomorrow. I'm also going to try DD with weetabix and other cereals I got.

I picked up some natural fromage frais so will mix that with my fruit puree, hopefully shell like that too.

thanks everyone Smile

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Sunnysummer · 14/10/2013 21:53

To add protein in a vegetarian-friendl way you could add some quinoa? DS loves quinoa porridge with some ebm (and sometimes banana) in the mornings, or I give it for his second meal with some sticks of broccoli or some omelette. Sweet potato might work too, if she already likes pumpkin?

Your plan sounds yummy but I agree on the sweetness - we were told that even fruit should be treated like a pudding in itself, so a meal should have a veg as well, or it'll be tricky to focus on savoury foods as they start eating more.

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JiltedJohnsJulie · 14/10/2013 20:44

Lidl do big tubs of full fat natural yoghurt too Smile

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Jackanory1978 · 14/10/2013 15:00

SetFireToTheRain actually if there's no family history of an allergy babies can have smooth peanut butter once they reach 6 months. It's recommended you wait till they're a year old only if there's a family history of nut allergy.

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Artandco · 14/10/2013 14:29

Total Greek yogurt or just supermarket own should have full fat versions

At 7 months here for example:

Breakfast: bit of scrambled egg
Lunch: some avocado sliced, cooked brocoli, raspberries ( like a piece of each)
Dinner: some fish and veg ( or whatever we had)

X4 6-8oz bottles a day as well

At 7 months you should still give milk before food. So if dinner is at 6pm, give a bottle at 5pm

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sparker22 · 14/10/2013 14:17

what about onken?

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MinesAPintOfTea · 14/10/2013 11:33

"Greek style" is full fat unless it says otherwise. As is most yoghurt: it will say if its low fat but not if its full fat.

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sparker22 · 14/10/2013 11:30

which natural yogurt? I've looked for full fat natural yogurt before but couldn't find any that said full fat....if anything they all said low fat Confused

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JiltedJohnsJulie · 14/10/2013 11:26

Whoops wrong link Blush. At least it wasn't the link from ebay where you can see a man full frontal Grin

The foods and things to avoid link is here

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JiltedJohnsJulie · 14/10/2013 11:25

Why no peanut butter until a year Set? Smooth nut butters are fine from 6 months.

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JiltedJohnsJulie · 14/10/2013 11:23

sparker don't be conned by the nutrition info on the Fromage fraise and the biscotti. The manufacturers are in business to make money from you, not to ensure your child is healthy. As others have suggested natural yoghurt with fruit is fine. If you are watching salt you really need to be limiting sugar too. Smile

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sparker22 · 14/10/2013 11:09

the puds were only really in case she still wanted something after her food...thought from age frais was good because of the calcium. and the Heinz biscotti, although a biscuit, do have a little bit of goodness in them going by the nutri info....

might give her fish fingers tonight (minus bread crumbs). she likes those....

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sparker22 · 14/10/2013 11:06

I'll probably have a sandwich but since she's had eggy bread for breakfast didn't want to do bread again for lunch.

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JiltedJohnsJulie · 14/10/2013 11:04

Well if she wants some of what you are having, that's fine, but I'd make sure she has her milk about an hour before.

Could you try tomorrow without breakfast or have your lunch while she's asleep?

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SetFiretotheRain · 14/10/2013 11:04

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

MinesAPintOfTea · 14/10/2013 11:00

What are you having for lunch? Try to give her something savoury as well as the sweet stuff...

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MinesAPintOfTea · 14/10/2013 10:58

I wouldn't be offering anything sweet except fruit at that age. No need for it regually and you do need to make sure there's plenty of fruit and veg (as well as water) to keep the bowels moving.

I always have a big pot of Greek yogurt in the fridge (mostly for me) and DS has had a spoonful of that with fruit from a fairly early stage in weaning, he's never had a fromage frais and pouches are for out and about: only pieces of fruit at home.

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sparker22 · 14/10/2013 10:56

what if she's telling me that she wants some food at dinner time? surely if she's showing an interest and eating if I give it to her then I should give her a third meal?

she's had eggy bread for breakfast, going to have the strawberries and bit of banana for lunch.

her milk intake has gone down over the last couple weeks, used to be around 30oz...now more like 20oz...which I'm assuming is because of the food...

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JiltedJohnsJulie · 14/10/2013 10:50

Agree with noble one or 2 meals a day is more than enough at 7 months. The NHS don't recommend moving to 3 meals a day until they are between 8 and 9 months.

Agree about not offering the Fromage fraise and biscotti too. There's no need for pudding yet really and they are both very sweet.

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Caitycat · 14/10/2013 07:43

My dd loves aubergine so I often make up a ratatouille style thing (aubergine, red pepper and courgette in tomato sauce) which will last her quite a while!

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AGnu · 14/10/2013 07:37

Pasta is really good for little hands. Avocado is a good, high calorie food but does stain horribly! Plain yoghurt is less sugary than petit filous, or similar, & you can add mashed fruit to it for variety. Protein-wise, I used to make lentil sticks (similar to falafels) for DS1 which he loved & I could make them just the right size/shape for him to hold. Cheese straws are really easy to make & can be whatever shape you want too. Or potato wedges - homemade, not the shop bought variety as they're covered in salt.

It's all coming back to me now! I'll be doing it all again with DS2 very soon... Eek! Wink

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gretagrape · 14/10/2013 07:20

Maybe also try to up the amount of savoury veggies as the list does lean towards the sweeter tasting ones and it might be hard to get her on things like broccoli/cauli etc later on if she gets used to only having sweet ones early.

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noblegiraffe · 13/10/2013 23:11

Oh, and baby sweetcorn are perfect size!

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noblegiraffe · 13/10/2013 23:10

You can buy oatcakes and spread them with Philadelphia, houmous or peanut butter, my 8 month old DD likes those for lunch. Omelette can be cut into strips, apple can be grated. Pear is quite soft so you can cut strips and leave the peel on to hold more easily. Strips of pepper are also popular.
You can also buy packs of fresh fruit sticks from Asda which are pineapple, mango and melon, just about the right size for holding if you slice them down the middle.

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sparker22 · 13/10/2013 22:41

dd's had a few things over the last few weeks and has been having breakfast beautiful for most of this time. the last few days she's taken to eating at lunch and dinner to so trying my best to give her healthy foods.

So far she likes:
banana
strawberries
fromage frais
eggy bread
toast
grated cheese
carrot
courgette
butternut squash
custard
sweetcorn crisps things
biscotti biscuits

I don't eat to healthy myself (though wanting to change this desperately so my DD grows up with healthy foods/lifestyle) so I'm finding it little difficult thinking of suitable things for her to eat. plus my husbands vege and she's not allowed quorn yet (NHS advise waiting till 9 months for quofn foods) so she can't reallllly eat what we do yet.

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