|
||||||
|
BLW Forum
Recent Articles
This Month
Month Archive
|
Saturday, June 23
by
Aitch
on Sat 23 Jun 2007 12:03 BST
[swoons girlishly]
Does anyone know what His Wrighteousness said? Anyway, I've already posted the Observer link on the right hand side but there are now stories on the BBC website and the Daily Mail as well. They all seem to be running with the same quotes and the story that feeding babies puree is 'unnatural', which, to be honest, doesn't sound very much like Gill Rapley talking but hey ho. I mean, feeding babies processed jars of food is unnatural in the sense that all processed food is, but it seems a bit of a harsh word to use under the circumstances. So what do we think? It's exciting, I think, that Baby Led Weaning is getting more exposure but I'm not entirely thrilled that it's being couched in such judgemental terminology. Post Script 23rd June. Well when the Kazakhstan Official News Service is reporting it, it's safe to say you've got a big story on your hands. Oh, and I have good reason to believe that Gill Rapley was, as we suspected, wildly mis-quoted in the Observer article. [taps nose] [saying nothing] Any more of these? The Times New Scientist The Telegraph The Guardian Earthtimes CyberMed Italy Spirit India Irish Health Daily Telegraph Australia Evening Standard Fox News MedIndia Bounty Times of India Thursday, June 21
by
Aitch
on Thu 21 Jun 2007 18:06 BST
I had the easy-peasiest, hassle-freeiest, tastiest, funniest, best time weaning my daughter. So thank you, Gill.
Join in ladies, she's getting a really, really hard time and has done bugger all wrong so far as I can see. Tuesday, June 19
by
Aitch
on Tue 19 Jun 2007 15:24 BST
Far be it from me to chastise anyone in my profession... but if you were thinking of doing a non-hysterical story about Baby-Led Weaning then email me and I will do what I can to help. I'm sure some of the parents of the babies in the photos would be only too happy to oblige with a quote or two. Press on my name above (Aitch) and you'll get the address. Oh how we all love the silly season...
Tuesday, May 1
by
Aitch
on Tue 01 May 2007 11:44 BST
I mean I know I should care, really, but I can't make myself. I've given away our breadmaker and everything. (To be fair, I wouldn't have done if I had more counter space but it was just So Big).
To give you a historic spin on the matter, my great-grandma had to be physically restrained from sprinkling salt on my food when I was a baby as according to her just a few grains would stimulate the taste buds. Now, presumably that means my mother and grandmother had endured the same treatment and yet their kidneys haven't failed. I appreciate, however, that a sample of two isn't scientifically compelling. Not only that, food has changed a lot since those days and processing adds layers of salt that we don't even taste any more. But I'd still have to say that it's not something I'm enormously troubled by. I don't add salt to things like pasta or veg, and we never add any at the dinner table, so I don't really pay much attention to salt in ham, cheese and bread since Babybear's turned one. Plus we've always preferred unsalted butter. We do add a bit of veal stock to casseroles and maybe some reduced salt Marigold to soups (although is it only me or does it make things taste awfully same-y?) so I think that makes us fairly virtuous on the salt front. Plus, Babybear drinks water well, so I'm not worried about dehydration. Am I kidding myself, however? Should I be more stressed about it? What do you lot do? Answers on a postcard please...
by
Aitch
on Tue 01 May 2007 00:31 BST
Aaaaah, Quorn. That's on my list of 'things we should eat more of.' Or is that tofu? I get so confused...
"Hi there
Aitch, I thought it was about time we had a
Quorn recipe on the blog so here is a recipe for veggie meatballs. It isn’t
really mine, I have amended it from Jenny Maizels book but the Pumpkin loves
these served with a tomato sauce and pasta so I thought I would share it. Be
warned though, it can be quite messy. Veggie Meatballs (but you could use
mince and have normal meatballs). Makes about 16 1 small red onion
chopped 1clove garlic,
chopped 200g veggie mince (I use
Quorn) 1tsp dried mixed
herbs 1tsp of smoked
paprika 2-3 tbsp of passata/tinned toms (I
usally use passata but I don’t think it matters
much) 11/2 slices of bread made into
breadcrumbs 1 beaten
egg Heat some olive oil and fry onion
and garlic until soft Add mince with herbs and tomatoes,
cook for about 5 mins (until it is cooked through if you are using meat rather
than veggie stuff) Stir in breadcrumbs, leave to cool
and then stir in the egg. Shape into walnut size balls (you
can freeze any you don’t want immediately at this
point) Place on a greased baking sheet for
about 20 mins (200/400/gas mark 6)" Saturday, April 28
by
Aitch
on Sat 28 Apr 2007 00:49 BST
Potato and Parsnip
Rosti
Ingredients 1 parsnip, peeled, cored and grated 1 potato, peeled and grated 50g/2oz unsalted butter (i dindn't bother weighing, I just used what I needed - alternatively you could just use olive oil) 1 tbsp olive oil Method 1. Place the grated potato and parsnip onto a clean tea towel and squeeze over a bowl to remove the excess liquid. 2. Melt the butter with the oil in a frying pan over a medium heat, add the grated potato and parsnip, press down and season with salt and freshly ground black pepper. 3. Fry the rösti for 2-3 minutes on each side, using a fish slice to carefully turn it over, until crisp and golden-brown. The recipe did not suggest this, but after cooking those fantastic cougette fritters today, I think the next time I would add some flour and a bit of baking powder too - as it seemed to bind everything so much better. It made about 10 baby friendly sized portions. Thursday, April 12
by
Aitch
on Thu 12 Apr 2007 01:28 BST
What are a few of your favourites?
I'd like to start with: 'Your baby will sleep through the night' Er, my baby did sleep through the night, right up until the moment that she started eating solids. Thank God it didn't take too long for her to re-settle. 'You have to start with mild flavours' Gawd, no. You should see Babybear's face when confronted with mild cheddar. She just point blank refuses, absolutely disgusted that something which looks like delicious mature cheddar would taste like whipped milky fat. Any others? Apart from, of course, the obvious... 'You've got to start with purees, so they can get used to the idea of eating.' Waaaahahaaaah. Tuesday, March 20
by
Aitch
on Tue 20 Mar 2007 13:27 GMT
There seem to be a lot of people starting off about now (welcome, ladies...) so I thought that if we could all rack our soggy memories for what we recall about the early days that might be a fun idea.
I'll start... Urm. She farted. Like, for the first time since she was very wee the farts seemed to go on for ever. And the poos. They started to smell rather rank. But for Babybear, they still kept that newborn consistency for months and months. Plus the food did not dissolve for ages either. It was like watching the Generation Game conveyor belt in our house, with me and DH shouting 'oooh, carrot, carrot', 'grape skin', 'apricot skin' 'resuscitated sultana' etc etc. The fruit skins often go black, by the way, which is most unnerving. And then of course the 'oh jesuschrist, come quick, the baby's got worms' when she did her first banana poo. Sorry to disappoint on this as well, but contrary to what every Health Visitor in the coutnry seems to think, her sleeping did Not Improve when she was weaned. It Got Worse. Having said that, she'd been sleeping all night since she was about 8 weeks old so we couldn't exactly have got better. It took a few weeks to readjust and then got fine again. Until she got to 10 months and her naps went a bit weird but that was because I was giving her food too close to bedtime I think, and her tummy was getting full of veg rather than yummy calorific, soporific milk. Anything else? I'm sure I've forgotten loads... Thursday, March 1
by
Aitch
on Thu 01 Mar 2007 22:21 GMT
You should have a look at them. The chap from the Dutch website (turns out he's a dietitian) has asked me to publish his Weaning Schedule and of course I've agreed. Plus there are some very cute clips of babies eating on youtube which might be worth showing to doubters.
Saturday, February 10
by
Aitch
on Sat 10 Feb 2007 23:26 GMT
Many people on Mumsnet are walking a sponsored mile with their babies in memory of a little two-year-old girl called Maude who went for her afternoon nap and died a victim of SIDS. Her mum is a prolific poster on Mumsnet and she is fully backing the campaign, which will raise money for Cot Death charities. The website is here, and anyone who wishes to join in or to make a donation would be doing A Good Thing.
Sunday, January 14
by
Aitch
on Sun 14 Jan 2007 22:06 GMT
Have just realised that about twenty listings for finger food have disappeared as we've obviously run out of space in the folder... will try to sort it later and will check if other folders have also been affected. Would have been nice if an alert had come up to warn me, huh? Sorry about this...
Tuesday, January 9
by
Aitch
on Tue 09 Jan 2007 00:55 GMT
Sorry about this, I'm operating between about four laptops at the moment and I've just realised I've deleted all my BLW emails between the end of November and now. Yes, that's right Vanilla, even the ones from tonight. I am only slightly an idiot... it's really mostly Dell's fault. Don't buy a laptop from them, please.
So could everyone who sent photos and recipes please, please re-send them? Sorry for the inconvenience, truly. Saturday, January 6
by
Morv
on Sat 06 Jan 2007 20:37 GMT
Apologies first, I have not intended to be the silent partner in the whole blog thing but my internet connection has been dead since before Christmas and I have just literally had time to fix it – i.e. spent a couple for hours on the phone to India, interestingly enough one of their quick fix questions was to ask if had a Christmas tree lights on! Embarrassingly enough my last bill had bounced and the lack of internet connection may have not been unrelated. Boomer being the junior member of the blwing team turned one a couple of weeks after Babybear. This coincided with stopping breastfeeding and moving on to cows milk, which she utterly loves. I has always thought that I would feed her myself for the 1st year and then switch over to cows milk gradually in the whole spirit if baby led weaning. Things happened a little more abruptly than I thought but I do think moving onto drinking and eating from breastfeeding are quite intertwined in our case – I will try and explain. Just before Christmas I started to get rubbed raw bits on my nipples which were not healing and getting slightly infected. (Nice yes I know) Breastfeeding was pretty painful but we persisted as I thought things would decrease naturally (which the feeds were) so I would just persist until the nipples healed and we wound down the breastfeeding. This was the situation for a about two weeks but things just got steadily worse and when Boomer bit me four times on hogmanay I actually thought I was going to have to get my nipple sewed back on. On new years day I woke and decided that I would delay giving Boomer a feed until later to hep the healing, but later came and I couldn’t face it , and Boomer had been drinking cows milk all day and frankly didn’t seem that bothered. So basically from then we’ve just stopped, she had been having cows milk for a while so to switch straight over I don’t think was really that hard on her. She doesn’t appear to want breastfed particularly and a snuggle and a drink seems to be an ok replacement. This is why I think this was a natural conclusion, I think that my nipples were getting really damaged because Boomer had changed the way she breastfed because she was eating more. Whether her jaw muscles have changed or she has simply started to ‘forget’ how to suckle I don’t know. It wasn’t that she had more teeth she has had the same amount for the last few months. I really don’t think it was coincidence that these problems appeared around the time of her first birthday and that magically weaning point. I would be interesting the know if anybody else has noticed a similar change in feeding. The main side effect of the sudden stop and not slow wind down is that my breasts have reached an engorged level only generally achieved through surgery and boy are they sore. It’s nearly a week and still the slightest knock is really painful. So If repeating the experience I would defiantly try and go for a controlled stop not an emergency one. Friday, December 29
by
Aitch
on Fri 29 Dec 2006 01:44 GMT
Or something like that. I could go and look at the pack but it's too far away...
Basically they are smaller than normal Shredded Wheat, so they're easy for the babies to hold onto. Obviously they're wheat, but salt-wise there's just a trace measurement so that's fine. I just microwave them for five seconds in a splash of cows' milk (because We Are One, y'know), so they absorb the milk and soften a little. Babybear eats about fifteen of these in a sitting, she loves them with a banana. Good news, as Babybear was becoming - dare I say it? - a little bored with porridge pancakes. More to the point, they are pretty clean breakfast so essential for those morning when a quick getaway is required. Post Script Littleducks from Mumsnet has pointed out that it was she who told me about Mini Shreddies, and has therefore demanded due credit. (Diva.) Sunday, December 10
by
Morv
on Sun 10 Dec 2006 17:10 GMT
Just discovered that pomegranate segments ( the small wee bits inside - segments, seeds dunno? ) make a great finger food. I think that pomegranates are just the best thing ever so I’m really glad that Boomer has also taken a liking to them. The only thing is that they are possibly the most expensive fruit but worth it. Pomegranates are one of these things that you see listed as super foods , and I do think they are just super too. Apparenty they are a natural contraceptive too, don’t know what quantities you have to eat though – or maybe you don’t eat it ….must stop there. It doesn’t mention pomegranates specifically in the allergy food guides so not sure if its one of these dangerous fruits or not – anybody got a clue? Thursday, November 30
by
Aitch
on Thu 30 Nov 2006 14:53 GMT
I do it quite often, actually. Since becoming a parent myself I've found that my tolerance for cooing over other people's babies has risen considerably. (And it's a good way of keeping Babybear occupied - she finds babies fascinating and appears entirely unaware that she is one herself.)
Anyway, one thought just struck me but I'm unsure how to express it without causing offence. Here goes. None of them exactly look like they're starving, do they? I mean, it's the biggest worry about doing this BLW thing, isn't it? That they aren't going to get enough, that somehow we are depriving them if we don't spoon the food into their mouths. And yet one look at the photos on this blog confirm that simply isn't the case. It has made me giggle a bit, actually. For the record, anyone who wants to put a photo up is welcome to send them to my email (press my name and you'll find it) and I'll stick them on for you with pleasure. More strange creatures for Babybear to stare at... (Weird, I've also just noticed that some of our photos of the early months have dropped off... wonder if the folder has become too big? Will investigate further.) Monday, November 27
by
Morv
on Mon 27 Nov 2006 12:07 GMT
Boomer has recently had a bit of a snuffle and bizarrely this has seemed to see an increase in her appetite. This seems to be contrary to everyone else’s experiences when their LO is under the weather. Now it may be that I don’t think she was ever really that unwell, or it may have just coincided with a natural increase in her self weaning process. I think that latter is probably more likely. So for all you out there concerned about when their appetite will really kick in , Boomer is now 10 ½ mths and it has only just happened. Boomer is still breastfed so I have no real way of checking her milk intake, but she still has about 4-5 feeds a day. I have however left her a couple of days from morning to night with someone else and she has just had food and water, no milk. Wednesday, November 22
Monday, July 10
by
Aitch
on Mon 10 Jul 2006 09:55 BST
...not that we are the experts...
That honour belongs to a health visitor and researcher called Gill Rapley, who wrote a paper in 2003 which explored the age at which children can and should be weaned onto solid food. The research found that six months was the optimum age, which is the time that mothers are now being told to wean by Health Visitors. However, the distinct advantage of weaning at six months is that by that time our children are developmentally capable of feeding themselves - which means no more mush! You just hand them the food in a suitably-sized piece and if they like it they eat it and if they don't they won't. (But they do, really they do... check out the six-month-old with the banana.) That's the essence of Baby Led Weaning. No purees, no ice cube trays, no moulis, no food processor, no potato masher, no baby rice, no mixing everything with expressed breast milk or formula, no weird combinations of fruits and vegetables, no preparing everything weeks in advance... just you and your child, eating food that you enjoy with you and your family. Anyway, as I said before, we are not experts in this area. What we are, however, is a pair of first-time mums feeling our way through the minefield that is encouraging our babies to have a healthy lifelong relationship with food. Our children (little darlings both) will be reporting from the front line over the next few months as we experiment with this Baby Led Weaning. (Although we'll be doing the bulk of the typing.) My baby is nearly seven months old and already she has enjoyed fistfuls of broccoli, banana, green beans, red pepper, rice cakes and hummus, toast and cream cheese, mature cheddar, peaches, apricots, avocado, cucumber, pear, pasta with anchovies, chilli and lemon (her father...), pork fillet, roast chicken, roast potatoes, Jersey Royals, sweet potatoes, asparagus, melon and butternut squash. All of which she grabbed in her own little fist and ADORED feeding herself while her parents ate their own meals. I can't even begin to tell you how pleasant it is to eat in a restaurant with your Baby Led Weaning child chomping on a piece of bread and butter or a chunk of cucumber from your salad beside you. Because it is a fairly new phenomenon we will hopefully be collating some information on Baby Led Weaning for you - personally I found it a nightmare trying to get hold of information on the subject, which is why I wanted to start this blog - but the truth is that the best way to start is to jump in. So join us, read how we are getting on and please, please comment on what we are doing. I'm probably going to be writing the bulk of the blog, principally because I suffer most from Runningoffatthemouth Disease. Morv is largely immune, but will be offering her salient and sensible opinions on the comments threads, as well as the odd (sometimes very odd) recipe. If you have any questions we will do our best to answer them, but remember, we are just getting started here. If you have any better ideas or advice to pass on then please tell us. Also, I know that I use a couple of websites and message groups already and you may have heard of the blog through them but I would really appreciate it if you could address any questions or comments only through this site as I really don't want anyone getting cross with me. I'm pretty sure you are required to register but I promise that we will take your privacy very seriously. Good luck to anyone starting out with the Baby Led Weaning - so far it's been great fun for us and I hope it will be for you too. Kindest regards, Aitch and Babybear, and Morv and Boomer. PS I am probably about to have a big fat falling out with 'Blogware', who are the people that supply the software for this site, so if anyone has bookmarked this page with the address that contains the word blogware could they please change it to www.babyledweaning.com? If everyone uses that from now on then we will keep our Google ranking (which is actually astonishingly high) when inevitably part company with them. Thanks so much, and thanks for coming to see the site, it means an awful lot. |
Recent Comments
Login
Search
Some Interesting Links
|
||||
|
||||||