Mastered milk? Great! Now it's time to start mixing your baby's mealtimes up a bit.
Introducing your baby to solid or textured foods (also known as weaning or complementary feeding) usually starts when they're around six months old. You should introduce your baby to a varied diet alongside their usual breast milk or formula. In the beginning, you only need to give your baby solid or textured food once a day, at a time that suits you both.
This is your chance to introduce new flavours to the menu, and to encourage your mini-me to get the hang of chewing by doing less of the work for them and providing solid food or meals with lumpier textures. Weaning teaches your baby how to move solid food around their mouth, chew and swallow solid foods.
You may find your baby is ready for finger foods and now wants to hold the spoon and feed themselves which is both exciting and messy in equal parts. It is great to encourage independent feeding, but choking is still a risk so don't leave them alone while eating.
Other steps to prevent choking include...
- Chopping and preparing foods as needed to make them safe
- Removing tough skins, seeds, pips and peels
- Avoiding round, smooth foods like large blueberries, whole nuts and whole grapes
- Moving through finger foods fairly gradually to allow skill development
What are the signs that my baby is ready for weaning?
When you begin weaning, you can go with your instincts, but also look out for the main signs of readiness to ensure that they're developmentally and physically ready to start having solid foods. They need to need to have an immune and digestive system that is ready to take more than milk alone and that is ready for a complex set of nutrients and compounds to break down and digest.
If they're ready, they will...
- Stay in a sitting position, holding their head steady
- Coordinate their eyes, hands and mouth so they can look at their food, pick it up and put it in their mouth
- Swallow food (rather than spitting or pushing it out)
- Make mouthing movements as they watch others eat and show an interest in food
The following behaviours can be mistaken for signs of being ready for solid foods...
- Chewing their fists
- Wanting extra milk feeds
- Waking up in the night (more than usual)
Top tips for introducing textured and solid foods
- Use a highchair or chair: Make sure that babies and young children are alert and seated safely upright in a highchair whilst eating.
- Watch your own facial expression:Â If you frown as you present certain foods, your baby will sense your negativity and become unsure of what you're offering them.
- Don't lose heart if they seem to 'dislike' a food: It may take 10 tries or more for your baby to get used to new foods, flavours and textures. There will be days when they eat more, some when they eat less, and then days when they reject everything. Don't worry - this is perfectly normal. Stop when they shut their mouth, turn away or arch their back. It can take a while for them to get used to a new flavour, so don't force it.
- Try and include your baby when the rest of the family are eating: This means that mealtimes become a social occasion and because babies learn by watching, they can learn by observing and follow your lead.
- Follow their lead: Most babies are ready for weaning from six months onwards, but be guided by your baby before you start introducing textured and solid (but soft) baby food. If your baby was born prematurely, ask your health visitor or GP for advice on when to start weaning.
- Embrace the mess: When they first start baby-led weaning, your baby might throw most (or all) of the food on the floor, taste the food only to then spit it out, and even smear the food in their hair. These are all totally normal, so don't stress and let your baby have fun with food! It's messy, but will help your little one learn to feed themselves as well as be more likely to taste a new food you've provided.
- Be mindful of teething: If your little one is pushing away the bite-sized meal in front of him, it may be because his gums are hurting. Try offering a cool puree instead.
- Breast milk and formula are still important: But give your baby solids before them to encourage them to accept new foods.
Baby weaning schedule
Below you can find a weaning schedule and how much food to give your baby when weaning at different ages.
Weaning from six months
- Baby shows signs of weaning 'readiness'
- Begin to introduce single tastes of fruits and vegetables
- Start with one small meal a day
- Offer purees or finger foods
- Introduce foods that can trigger allergic reactions early in the day, one at a time and in very small amounts so that you can spot any reaction
- Leave a two or three day gap between each allergen introduction, then move on to the next
- Continue to offer your baby breast milk or formula
Weaning from seven to nine months
- Gradually start to move towards three meals
- Increase the variety of foods and offer iron rich ingredients
- Offer milk responsively
Weaning from ten months to one year
- Offer three meals a day
- Offer family foods that vary in taste and texture
- Offer milk responsively
How do you move on from purees to textured food?
Moving on from purees really helps babies to enjoy a wide and varied diet, and the whole weaning process is all about the gradual transition to family foods. This includes a gradual transition through textures. Purees, to mashed foods to lumpy foods to solid foods.
- Initially, you want a nice smooth runny puree that runs off the spoon like soup for your first few tastes. Then you want to think about moving the texture up a notch to continue baby's progress.
- Next, move onto a texture that falls off the spoon in a few small dollops.
- Finally, when baby is more than capable of swallowing non-liquid food from a spoon, you can opt for a mined or chopped texture and offer it alongside soft finger foods.
What shape and size should my baby's first solid finger foods be?
When it comes to first finger foods, it's generally recommended to offer little one's finger foods that are baton-shaped (around the size and shape of an adult finger), and squidge-able between your finger and thumb so that your baby can squash the food in their mouth using their tongue and the roof of their mouth of gums.
Ideally finger foods should be sturdy enough to be held, but soft enough to be flattened with a little pressure. Avoid round shapes and firm foods and cut small round fruits like grapes, cherries, berries, strawberries, and cherry tomatoes into quarters.
Did you know...
There are actually four types of feeding behaviours that babies use when they eat, suckling, sucking, munching and chewing.
Suckling and sucking are innate but munching (between four and seven months of age) and chewing (around seven months of age) are learned as baby is introduced to a variety of food textures. For this reason, it's important to give babies smooth, mashed and lumpy textures, as well as an array of different finger foods to help them learn and develop during their weaning journey.