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Home > Family Health & Lifestyle > Children's Health > Feeding Your Baby > Food Preparation

Feeding Your Baby


Care During Preparation

Should any special care be taken during preparation?

By taking  due care during preparation the nutritive value of many weaning foods can be improved. Weaning food should not be excessively watered down or thinned in the belief that it will be easier to ingest and digest. A classic example of this is the thin ‘dal’ water. Even small babies can easily tolerate semi-solid foods and over dilution results in loss of valuable calories.

Unnecessary loss of nutrients should be avoided. For example, do not wash vegetables after cutting them into small pieces. The smaller the piece, the greater is the loss of nutrients. Use the minimum amount of water for cooking and mash the food with the water used for cooking. Adding excess water and draining it off later results in loss of water-soluble nutrients and should be avoided.

 Highlights

Life As a Parent

You & Your     Baby

Emotional     development
    of a child

Height & Weight     pattern

Children's Sleep

Related Issues

(Feeding Your Baby)

Care taken     during Food     Preparation

Simple Snacks     for Kids

Various food     preparations

 

Husks, bean skin and vegetable fibers must be thoroughly mashed in the beginning as it  can cause indigestion.

The food does not need to be mashed but, if required, can be chopped or pounded. A variety of household foods can be given five or six times a day, such as rice, dal, roti or khichri and increase the quantity gradually. Idli, upma or curd rice can be given. A variety of vegetables and seasonal fruits can also be given. Foods like curd, egg, kheer and bread can be included. Egg can be given either in boiled or scrambled form. Raw eggs should be avoided to prevent Salmonella infection. Fish or minced meat can also be added in non-vegetarian families.

Sample feed:Food Pyramid

½ a bowl of mashed cereal foods, vegetables (finger foods), potato, leafy vegetable, boiled/fried egg ( mashed), Mashed piece of cooked fish (without masala). At least 4 times a day.

By the time your baby is a year old he should be taking:

Milk

2 to 3 cups

Dal 

2 tablespoons

Egg

One

Meat/Fish 

2 tablespoons

Cooked green or yellow vegetables

2 tablespoons

Other vegetables including potatoes

2 tablespoons

Fruit for Vitamin C

1 serving

Other fruit

¼ cup

Rice (cooked)

¼ cup 

Chapati/bread

½ to 1 

Butter/ghee Vanaspati

1 teaspoon

Foot notes

Breast feed the child till 1 years of age, and even during illness.

Water should be boiled and cooled according to thirst.

During illness feed the child as normal, even if he resists.

During diarrhea, give lot of fluids to the child, in fact replace each bout of stools with a glass (250 ml) of clean boiled water.

Calorie Dense Foods

Malting

How is the food malted?

Soak overnight.

Remove the water and tie in the moist cloth and keep in warm place (Sprouting).

After 48 hours when sprouts come out dry in sun or roast it.

Make into flour.

Well cooked and mashed cereals mixed with milk and sugar can be given to meet the increased demands of calorie and protein. Sprouted pulses and beans can be used. Cereals like wheat, bajra, ragi, jowar, and pulses like moong (whole) can be malted.

Advantages

Calorie consumption can be increased. During the process of malting, starch is converted to maltose due to increased production of enzyme amylase. Thus, this is also called Amylase Rich Food. Due to the conversion of starch into amylose, thinner gruels are made. With this either the infant can consume more gruel or more flour can be added to make thick gruel.

A major advantage of preparation of these energy dense foods is that they are pre-cooked. Thus, these cereals in powdered form can be stored in airtight bottles. They can be mixed with boiled water, cooked for a few minutes and fed to the baby.

Also, ½ to 1 teaspoon of malted cereal, added to porridge, khichri and other weaning foods, will reduce its viscosity and child will be able to eat a larger quantity of it. This is a very good way of increasing energy density of weaning foods.

The malting process increases the riboflavin, niacin content. Sprouting various pulses and beans increase the content of vitamin B group and vitamin C.

However, this food should not be given throughout the day, but given 1-2 times in the whole day. This is because the child should become familiar and develop a taste for all foods and not reject them.

As the shelf life is short, malting has to be done every three or four weeks.

 
 
 
 
 

  

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