Showing posts with label BLW. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BLW. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Veg and Feta Rice Tart - Diabetic foods

Last pregnany, I got told I had Gestational Diabetes. I was pretty sceptical as I was 2 months into strict bed rest when they did the test. BUT it was a pretty good reason to what my carb and fat, therefore energy intake. A good thing for anyone really. Substitute the white rice with any alternative grain - diversify the diet!


1/2 cup cooked long grain rice (or millet, brown rice, pearl barley)
1 egg, lightly beaten
2 tsp olive oil
1 small onion, finely chopped
75g button mushrooms, sliced
50g baby spinach leaves, shredded
100g reduced-fat feta, crumbled
250g pumpkin, cut into 2 cm cubes and steamed
4 eggs, extra, lightly beaten
6 cherry tomatoes, halved


Preheat the oven to 180 degrees celcius and lightly grease a 23cm pie dish.
Combine rice and egg and using the back of a spoon, smooth into the pie dish.
Bake for 20 minutes.
Heat the oil in a large deep frying pan and cook the onion for 3 min, add mushrooms and cook for 3 min until soft.
Add spinach and stir through until wilted slightly.
Arrange half the feta into pie shell, and top with the pumpkin.
Spread the onion mixture over the top, then the remaining feta.
Pour eggs over, and nestle the tomatoes, cut side up, into the filling.
Bake for 45 minutes, until set and golden.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Do's and Dont's a Baby Led Weaning

DOs and DON’Ts for baby-led weaning

1. DO offer your baby the chance to participate whenever anyone else in the family is
eating. You can begin to do this as soon as he shows an interest in watching you,
although he is unlikely to be ready to put food in his mouth until he is about six months
old.

2. DO ensure that your baby is supported in an upright position while he is experimenting
with food. In the early days you can sit him on your lap, facing the table. Once he is
beginning to show skill at picking food up he will almost certainly be mature enough to
sit, with minimal support, in a high chair.

3. DO start by offering foods that are baby-fist-sized, preferably chip-shaped (i.e., with a
‘handle’). As far as possible, and provided they are suitable, offer him the same foods
that you are eating, so that he feels part of what is going on.

4. DO offer a variety of foods. There is no need to limit your baby’s experience with food
any more than you do with toys.

5. DON’T hurry your baby. Allow him to direct the pace of what he is doing. In particular,
don’t be tempted to ‘help’ him by putting things in his mouth for him.

6. DON’T expect your baby to eat any food on the first few occasions. Once he has
discovered that these new toys taste nice, he will begin to chew and, later, to swallow.

7. DON’T expect a young baby to eat all of each piece of food at first – remember that he
won’t yet have developed the ability to get at food which is inside his fist.

8. DO try rejected foods again later – babies often change their minds and later accept
foods they originally turned down.

9. DON’T leave your baby on his own with food.

10. DON’T offer foods which present an obvious danger, such as peanuts.

11. DON’T offer ‘fast’ foods, ready meals or foods that have added salt or sugar.

12. DO offer water from a cup but don’t worry if your baby shows no interest in it. A
breastfed baby, in particular, is likely to continue for some time to get all the drinks he
needs from the breast.

13. DO be prepared for the mess! A clean plastic sheet on the floor under the high chair
will protect your carpet and make clearing up easier. It will also enable you to give
back foods that have been dropped, so that less is wasted. (You will be pleasantly
surprised at how quickly your baby learns to eat with very little mess!)

14. DO continue to allow your baby to breastfeed whenever he wants, for as long as he
wants. Expect his feeding pattern to change as he starts to eat more solid foods.

15. If you have a family history of food intolerance, allergy or digestive problems, DO
discuss this method of weaning with your health advisers before embarking on it.

16. Finally, DO enjoy watching your baby learn about food – and develop his skills with his

Baby Led Weaning

I clearly remember my sister telling me one day to turn around a look at her daughter in the high chair. She was eating spagetti, cramming it in by the fist full. It was all over the table, her hands, her face, and even the floor. What a joy! She wasn't being naughty, she wasn't throwing it. She was enjoying herself throughly, while controlling how much went in her mouth herself.


This, it turns out, is Baby Led Weaning (BLW). Heres a low down on what it is and how to do it.


CONTROL - Whether breast fed or bottle fed, babies are used to controlling their intake of milk - how fast they suck, how much they suck and sometimes, how often they feed. It makes sense to me that they are able to control the intake of solids as well.


Babies are inquisitive little creatures too, and are eating solids out of cusiosity, rather than hunger. When first introducing solids, the bulk of nutrition and energy comes from milk.


Once their little hands get moving, babies are out to touch and taste almost anything they can get their hands on - car keys, dirt, their own feet. They love to explore and feel their world, including the food they eat.


CHOKING - I guess your first reaction is to assume to baby will choke if the food isn't pureed. With BLW, babies control what enters their mouth - Sakura would feel it around the front of her mouth before mushing it with her tongue and swallowing. Plus she was feeding it in herself with her hands, only putting as much in as she could handle.


It feels like she has LESS chance of choking because she never puts anything new in her mouth without feeling it around inside her mouth first. We're yet to see if I'm wrong, but being a baby, theres been some pretty weird stuff go in there!


Spoon feeding on the other hand encourages babies to suck the food straight into the back of their mouths. No feeling, tasting or discovering done on the way there!


GUMS CHEW FOOD - babies are capable of sucking or biting of a section of soft strawberry, avacado or steamed veg with their gums, and mushing it around with their gums and tongue before swallowing.


FIST SIZED FOODS - cut the food into long chip sized pieces, so they baby can hold onto a section and bite of the other. This allows them to control the amount of food, as opposed to bite sized pieces were they are forced to cram the whole lot in.


Baby unable to hold the food? It would make sense that they just aren't ready for solids yet?


VARIETY - offering a variety of textures, colours, flavours, sizes, and shapes gives the baby an amazing introduction to real foods, A couple of different vegetables pureed to a pulp offers none of this!


FOODS
Avacado
Strawberries
Pear
Banana
Kiwi Fruit
Stone fruit - mango, peach.
Steamed apple
Steamed pumpkin, cauliflower, choko (chayote), zucchini


WHEN YOU GET CONFIDENT - these foods are a little firmer
Steamed brocolli,  carrot sweet potato and potato
Cherry tomato
Grapes, watermelon, mandarine


Have fun and take lots of photos! Its such a joy to see a baby really discover the appearance, taste and texture of food.


Heres a great link to help : http://www.babyledweaning.com/

BABY LED WEANING
http://www.scribd.com/fullscreen/56984967?access_key=key-25rq8gkjd79ij5pb8cep
http://www.scribd.com/fullscreen/56984907?access_key=key-e8umtr1f2oho11zhmd5

Going in for the kill!

First Pumpkin Happiness!



First Mango - The JOY!