Have seen few AIBU threads recently on the topic and there's a pattern here. The OP in these threads is complaining because their mum or MIL is giving the baby sweets or chocs.
Lots of people then say, yes, YABU, because
- a few sweets won't harm the baby
- grandparents love to give babies treats
- babies love sweet stuff
... and I agree with all of that.
BUT - there's one problem with giving babies even a little bit of sweet stuff, and that's the question of teaching their taste buds about sweetness.
"In the wild" - neolithic times which is as far as we've physically evolved - the sweetest food available would have been fruit. So it's easy to see why babies would have a sweet tooth and would want sweet things whenever available.
But now we've worked out how to purify the sugar in plants to make food which is intensely sweet, a sweetness never found in natural food. And it's available all day every day.
And (the real issue for me), this stuff is far sweeter than the natural sweetness of fruit. If you eat a slice of choccy cake and then a plum, the plum will taste quite tart.
So I do worry that giving babies sweet stuff will reset their taste buds to the sweeter end of the spectrum. I've definitely noticed with my 2 that they went off fruit for a bit after encountering biscuits.
It means you can't just let babies eat whever they want nowadays - they won't naturally eat a healthy diet because they're "wired" to go for sweet stuff and the sweet stuff we have isn't good for them in huge quantities.
I know there's a lot of luck involved here, but dd2 has just turned 1 and she really enjoys eating fruit and sweet potato, and I can't help wondering if part of that's because it tastes sweet to her as it's pretty much the sweetest food she knows.
Sorry, very long winded and boring, but I was just wondering if anyone else felt the same, ie that this is an area where "everything in moderation" doesn't necessarily work.
Anyone?
(I'm specifying under-ones by the way, because I think this only works while they're too young to notice what other children eat. After that, IMO, it's cruel to withold things that they see others eating.)