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Weaning

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

I thought I had this weaning business almost cracked but now see I am probably killing my baby!

59 replies

GTFrau · 01/03/2007 16:39

Sorry, this is very, very, very long!

I have largely followed the advice (the bits I think sounded sensible, ignoring any bits I didn't like) in Rachel Waddilove's Book 'How to Enjoy Year One'(well if it is good enough for Gwyneth ). DS is a fab almost 9 month old now who has always slept well etc. based on her 'routines' so when it came to weaning him at 6 months I saw no reason not to delve back into the book.

RW says 'At this age they can pretty much eat what the rest of the family eat, well mashed, as long as you don't add any salt to your cooking'. Fine, sounds like a sensible interpretation of current advice to me and because I feel we eat a pretty good, normal varied diet I figured this is the best route for us - but looking through some threads to find out some ideas for restaurant feeding him when we go on holiday next month (because of adding salt, actually) I have been reduced to a quivering wreck by some of the posts!

No, I never ADD salt to my cooking but, I use tinned tomatoes in our food, DS eats bread and I have even been known to use the odd stock cube where required. (We have recently moved to Germany and they don't seem to be into 'low salt' anything, but I have remained calm and rationalised that the amount of salt in toms etc. must be OK. He loves eating weetabix for breakfast and sucking cheesespread off of fingers of toast sometimes for lunch. He eats what we ate the night before 5 days out of seven (so far the only thing he has poo pooed is avocado) and the rest of the time he gets something virtuous from AK's book or something more 'nursery tea' biased from my head (cheese spread on toast, well cooked scrambled egg etc.). Am I being a terrible mum with this salt thing or are some people just choosing to take things to the 'nth' degree (which is fine, no criticism intended). I am seriously twitched as I would never do anything to harm my DS (obviously) and have always prided myself on knowing what's what but now I feel quite ill with worry!

While I am at it - I may as well also confess that while he adores eating plenty of fruit etc. he has also partaken of the odd 'naughty sweet treat' such as (gulp) a spoonful or two of ice cream and (big deep breath for courage) also had a teeney weeney bit of chocolate from our chocolate fountain on a piece of banana the other day when we had friends over for lunch. He also eats the odd children's yoghurt (battening down hatches now). All these things I thought were fine, in moderation, until today.

I thought I was just trying to rear a child who enjoys all kinds of food and has a healthy attitude to it - not make him obese or poison him with salt and just need some well rounded advice, guidance or reassurance.

OP posts:
Enid · 01/03/2007 20:50

I had incredibly low bp when pg so took that as my cue to cover everything with a frosty layer of Maldon sea salt

yum

in fact I dip roasted chicken skin straight into the salt pig for a yummy treat

AitchTwoOh · 01/03/2007 20:51
Enid · 01/03/2007 20:52

and I make mash the decadent way by baking potatoes in the oven

scooping out the flesh for the dds

then dipping the crispy potato skin in the salt pig

AitchTwoOh · 01/03/2007 20:53
welliemum · 01/03/2007 21:01
Jillyadoodledoo · 01/03/2007 21:01

Aitch and Enid! You are both so so norty!

morningpaper · 01/03/2007 21:40

saltpig that would be a good MN nickname

SouperciliousDragon · 02/03/2007 00:57

what's saltpig?

caspercat · 02/03/2007 17:38

BTW can get lower salt Marmite substitute from healthfood shops. Called Natex. Myself am sure (grammar?!) is an inferior copy, but dd just devoured it on toast no complaints

Twinklemegan · 02/03/2007 20:34

We do all need some salt - salt is not a bad thing in itself. I'm not sure at what age babies start to actively need a little salt though - does anyone know?

KristinaM · 02/03/2007 20:39

i have doen teh same as you with all 3 kids. except I dont use stock cubes for food teh baby will eat and I try to use cheese rather than cheese spread

funnypeculiar · 02/03/2007 20:42

nigella's salt pig Looks a bit like a urinal, though.

Nikki76 · 02/03/2007 20:42

I made DS a puree with tinned tomatoes....is it ok for him to eat?!! Didn't see any salt in the ingredients but now puzzled as to why they have been mentioned and scared to feed to him!

funnypeculiar · 02/03/2007 20:43

And soooo glad someone else has said that about tinned tomatoes - I've just read it and gone 'blah, blah, fingers in ears, not listening' - wtf am I meant to cook if I can't use tinned toms?!
GTFrau - sounds like you're doing a great job

MuminBrum · 02/03/2007 21:06

GTFrau, your DS's diet sounds just like what my DS was eating at the same age, and all my mum buddies were feeding their kids similar things. My boy will be three in a couple of weeks and is now bright, bouncing and slim, loves his food and eats a very varied diet, as do the great majority of his little mates. So carry on doing what you're doing and you won't go far wrong.

chocolatekimmy · 02/03/2007 22:13

Is there something wrong with weetabix, I thought that was a healthy option for breakfast? I always add fresh pureed fruit of somekind to it or the same with ready brek (hot oat cereal).

Surely they are better than the packet baby breakfast cereals (i thought they had lots of sugar added).

GTF, sounds like DS has a good varied diet

Twinklemegan · 02/03/2007 22:15

Who's mentioned Weetabix? Gawd I hope that's not too salty - I absolutely refuse to buy special baby cereals.

CanSleepWeirdShifts · 02/03/2007 22:27

Sounds great GTFrau.

I think I'm guilty of commenting on tinned tomatoes at some point in the past, because I had some which did contain salt (can't remember which brand, but prob bought from Tesco). I use Napolina now and they are salt free.

I make my own chicken stock, use lo-salt veg stock, but normal beef stock cubes or bovril.

DD has had a tiny bit of chocolate (she's milk intolerant, so the choice here is limited), and she's even had corned beef and spam on the odd occasion .

Babies are 'allowed' 1g of salt a day up to age 1, and then 2g a day, so a little bit isn't going to do them any harm.

Bread and bread products are the one thing I try to limit because of salt. There was an interesting article about this published today, here .

AitchTwoOh · 03/03/2007 00:43

SPAM???!!!!

WriggleJiggle · 03/03/2007 05:35

This is one of those threads I shouldn't have opened
I've been happily feeding dd a weetabix a day for the last week. Are they really that bad? If she doesn't have weetabix I need to find another cereal. She loves cornflakes, but I suppose those are on the 'bad parenting' list too?

tiktok · 03/03/2007 08:28

Seems to me people are panicking about tiny amounts of salt! We'd worry about salt with young babies, especially bottle fed young babies, whose intake is more 'controlled' by mum....a breastfed baby will simply breastfeed more or longer to meet any extra fluid needs because of a slightly elevated salt intake, whereas a bottle fed baby might find this harder to do. But in any case, the babies we are talking about here are six months and over, taking minisucle amounts of salt, mostly naturally present in the foods or added (as in bread and weetabix) in only tiny quantities.

I don't get it. I know we want to protect our babies,but talk of 'poisoning' and 'quivering wrecks' and being 'ill with worry'......where's your common sense, people ?

Nbg · 03/03/2007 08:34

GTFrau, about the chocolate, I think your doing the right thing. IMO if its made a "forbidden fruit" it makes you want it more.

I think what your doing sounds great.

WanderingTrolley · 03/03/2007 08:42

I second Nbg (and everyone else further back on the thread!)

My mother put salt in everything - I especially don't miss her salty custard wtf - and this has not killed me yet. (I'm thirty flippin five)

Your boy has a great diet and you have a healthy attitude imho, GTFrau.

CanSleepWeirdShifts · 03/03/2007 09:34

Go on Aitch - you know babybear would love to try a bit of spam.... just a tiny bit....one bite won't do any harm.....everyone else is having some...go on...you know you want to...

Nbg · 03/03/2007 11:19

Fried spam

The best bits the jelly on the outside.

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