For all the controlling/protective/do it yourself/organic/money saving mommies out there, making your own baby food is extremely easy and gratifying! I really want Will to eat as healthy as possible (none of those stinkin perservatives...) AND I want to introduce him to ALL types of food (cauliflower, white peaches, yellow squash from his Great Nana's garden :), etc.)
Seriously, it is SO easy, especially at first b/c it takes a while before they eat more than an ounce in a sitting. All you need is fresh fruit/veggies and a food processor. Advertisers will have you believe that you HAVE to have a "baby food maker"...but you don't.
Here's the process in a nutshell (pictures and details below): Steam, bake, or boil the fruit/veggies. Transfer them to the food processor and puree, then scoop the food out into ice trays and wrap them in plastic wrap. When frozen, pop them out into labeled freezer bags. I put the date and food on the freezer bag. And presto!.....Homemade organic baby food!
I will admit, I do not make ALL his food. I don't like making bananas, so I buy them for now. When he can eat bigger chunks, I'll start mashing them up for him. I have bought foods to introduce them into his diet. The first foods I introduced to him were peas, sweet potato, and butternut squash. I gave these foods to him "out of the jar" first, and when I was confident he was tolerating them, I made these foods.
Today, I'm going to take you through the steps of making butternut squash, sweet potatoes, and yellow squash...get ready, b/c after you see this, you'll want to make your own!
This is to show you what the finished product will look like. These are apples and pears that are in my freezer now. When you first start giving your baby solid foods, he probably won't eat a whole cube, but it won't take too long before he's eating 3 cubes!! Mine is 8 months now, and he eats 3-4 ounces for breakfast, lunch, and dinner!
First - Butternut Squash!
One butternut squash goes for about $1.29 at my lo
cal grocery store. One squash ends up making about 30 ounces of food, which would be roughly $6.50 of the store bought stuff. Already saving money! It's important to remember that most foods, even fruit has to be cooked before pureeing.
Rinse the squash. Cut the butternut in half long ways, scoop all the seeds out, and lay cut side down on a baking sheet. TIP: use a baking sheet with raised sides b/c you have to put about half inch of water in the pan.
Bake the squash at 350 for 30-40 minutes, until you can stick a fork in it pretty easily. The top of the squash will take longer b/c it's thicker, so check this part with the fork. Your house will smell pretty good while it's baking :)
Let cool then scoop out all the goodness into a food processor. Depending on the size of the squash and your food processor, you might have to do two rounds of pureeing. DO NOT discard the cooking liquid, this will need to be used to add to the puree to make it the right baby food consistency. You might have to add a bit of water on top of the cooking liquid. No worries if you don't get the consistency exactly right, you can always add a touch of water to thin it out when you thaw it later on.
Once pureed, scoop out the puree into ice cube trays. You can buy the fancy silicone ones with the lids, or you can buy the cheap ones (I did) and wrap plastic wrap around it. Each cube holds roughly an ounce. Wrap it up, and stack it in the freezer. I always let it set up overnight. The next day, take it out of the freezer and let it sit on the counter for about 10 minutes. This will help it pop out into the bags easily. And you're done! Now you have baby food in neat one ounce cubes on hand to thaw for your baby :)
Second - Sweet Potato
I can never remember if it has an "e" on the end...ha! I can't remember how much sweet potatoes are, but I know they're pretty cheap. I'd get 2 or 3 for your first time. I think 2 should make about 20 ounces.
Rinse Potatoes. Take skin off with veggie peeler.
Steam potatoes until tender (do not overcook!). You can use a steamer basket or whatever works for you.
Follow freezing directions from above!
TIP: you can easily make squash and sweet potatoes the same day to save some time.....here's how.....wash veggies, peel potatoes, cut and scoop squash, get the squash in the oven, get double boiler ready and heating, cut up potatoes, get squash out of the oven, puree potatoes and put in ice trays while squash cools, rinse food processor, puree squash and out in ice trays, wrap all the trays, and put in freezer! Takes about an hour total, maybe a little longer your first time :)
Third - Yellow Squash
My Nana (Will's Great Nana) has a garden and she brings me yellow squash from time to time. How awesome that Will gets to eat home grown veggies?!?! Cost--free!!! I think I used 4 or 5 small yellow squash and it made about 16 ounces total.
Scrub the squash with a veggie scrubber. Your baby will end up eating the skin, that's why you scrub it. Cut into slices.
If using small squash like I did, just cutting into slices will be good enough. If you're using larger squash, you might have to cut the slices in half.
Steam until tender.
I made this for Will a couple weeks ago and added butter to the puree....yummy!!! I made some with butter and some without butter. I did this b/c you should introduce butter like you would any other food. For example, I gave Will plain yellow squash for three days, then I gave him yellow squash with butter the following three days. Since he can now eat butter, I can add a touch to other foods like sweet potatoes! Once pureed, scoop into ice trays and follow the above freezing directions!
Now you're ready to start making your own baby food! Please let me know how your baby food adventures turn out and if you have any ideas or advice!
This is a great step by step process on how to make baby food. I never made it for my kids but I wish I had. Noah ate a good bit of baby food for a while but Gracie wasn't really having it. She wanted smashed up table food. It the banana didn't come out of the peel she didn't want to eat it. :)
ReplyDeleteI did however make Gracie's formula. I breastfed as much as I could (which was never enough for my chubby babies) and since Gracie couldn't handle store bought formula I made her goat's milk formula at home. At first I felt pretty radical doing it but Gracie took to it so well I kept going. It turns out the formula I was making was so healthy for her she wasn't sick her entire first year. Her doctor was on board because he lives out in the country and keeps goats himself (a fact I didn't know when I started). There is a lot to be said for making your own food for your baby. I think a lot of moms don't realize how easy it is!
Beth Botwin
Beth - Seriously, you made you own formula?!!? That's awesome! I tried to nurse Will, but it just didn't work out, so I promised myself that I would make his food (kinda makes up for it a tad in my mind). As for now, he's eating baby food like a champ, but I'm sure that will change once he starts to feed himself...I've heard this comes along with crawling, and he's tthhhiisss close to crawling, which means disaster for me...ha!
ReplyDeleteI did indeed. I did research and found out what her little body needed and that I need to water the goat's milk down so she could digest it since it was so dense and that I needed to add vitamins to it and I went from there. This link was my starting point:
ReplyDeletehttp://oreganicthrifty.blogspot.com/2009/05/goat-milk-formula-recipe.html
I wish I'd done it for Noah. He couldn't handle cow's milk to start with either so we put him on soy formula. If I'd known what I know now I would have made him goat's milk formula. I bought those quarts of goat's milk like crazy...from Publix of all places. It's right there with the regular milk and it's in a purple container. Now they have both grown out of that phase and can tolerate cow's milk. I buy organic when I can but it gets expensive since our family can really throw back the milk. :)
Yes, crawling and finger foods. Good times. I tell you what, having a toddler and a preschooler, my house is never in order and toys are always everywhere. It seems like someone is always spilling a snack somewhere and I'm always vacuuming up some sort of finger food. But! I remind myself that even though my house might look like a hurricane hit it (Hurricane Noah and Hurricane Gracie) not everyone is as blessed as I am to have two sweet little faces that shower me with hugs and kisses. Noah hugs me and says, "Mama you are the best mama in the whole WORLD!" I figure in his little 3 year old world, maybe I am. I'll take it. :) There will be lots of messes and spills but the ride you're own is the best ride there is. Nothing melts my heart like Noah hugging me and saying, "Mama I love you so much. Every day."
Beth
What a great tutorial! Nat is on table food now but we did jar food...I'm too lazy to make baby food, ha! But this is a great resource; thanks for sharing! :)
ReplyDelete