Starting
Solid Foods
Breastmilk is all your baby needs until at least four
months of age. Most babies will do fine with exclusive
breastfeeding until 6 months of age or longer.
Why start solid foods?
Because there comes a time when breastmilk no longer
supplies all your babys nutritional needs. (This
does not mean, as some uninformed people say, that there
is no nutritional value in breastmilk after the baby is
six months old.) A full term baby will start requiring
iron from other sources by 6 to 9 months of age. The
calories supplied by breastmilk may become inadequate by
8 to 9 months of age, although some babies can continue
to grow well on breastmilk alone well past a year.
Because some babies not started on solids by a certain
age (9-12 months) may have great difficulty accepting
solid foods.
Because it is a developmental milestone that your
child passes when he starts solid foods. He is growing up.
Usually, he will want to eat solids. Why stop him?
When to start solid foods.
The best time to start solids is when the baby is
showing interest in starting. Some babies will become
very interested in the food in their parents plates
as early as 4 months of age. By 5 or 6 months of age,
most babies will be reaching and trying to grab food that
parents have on their plates. When the baby is starting
to reach for food, this seems a reasonable time to start
giving him some. There really is no reason to start on a
specific date (4 months, or 6 months). Go by the babys
cues.
In some cases, it may be better to start food earlier.
When a baby seems to be hungry, or when weight gain is
not continuing at the desired rate, it may be reasonable
to start solids as early as 3 months of age. However, it
may be possible, with help, to continue breastfeeding
alone and have the baby less hungry and/or growing more
rapidly. But if the techniques used in the clinic do not
deal with the problem, adding solids can help. There is
no advantage to giving artificial baby milk (formula) and
there may be some disadvantages. The baby who is not
satisfied completely at the breast may start to take more
and more from the bottle, and end up refusing to take the
breast.
The breastfed baby digests solid foods better and
earlier than the artificially fed baby because breastmilk
contains enzymes which help digest fats, proteins and
starch. As well, breastfed babies have had a wide variety
of tastes in their lives, since the flavours of many
foods the mother eats will pass into her milk. Breastfed
babies thus accept solids more readily than artificially
fed babies. Breastmilk is amazing stuff, eh?
How should solids be introduced?
When the baby is starting to take solids at about 5 or
6 months of age, there is little difference what he
starts with or in what order foods are introduced. It is
prudent to avoid highly spiced or highly allergenic foods
at first (e.g. egg white, strawberries), but if the baby
reaches for the potato on your plate, make sure it is not
too hot, and let him have the potato. There is no need to
go in any specific order, and there is no need for the
baby to eat only one food for a certain period of time.
Some exclusively breastfed babies dislike infant cereal
when it is introduced at 5 or 6 months of age. There is
no need for concern and no need to persist if the baby
doesnt want the cereal. There is nothing magic or
necessary about infant cereal. Offer the baby foods that
he is interested in. Allow the baby to enjoy food and do
not worry exactly how much he actually takes at first.
Much of it may end up in his hair and on the floor anyhow.
There is no need either that foods be pureed if the baby
is 5 or 6 months of age or older. Simple mashing with a
fork is all that is necessary at first. You also do not
have to be exceedingly careful about how much the baby
takes. Why limit the baby to one teaspoon if he wants
more? You do not need to waste your money on commercial
baby foods.
Be relaxed, feed the baby at your mealtimes, and as he
becomes a more accomplished eater of solid foods, offer a
greater variety of foods at any one time.
The best source of iron for the baby 5 or 6 months of
age is meat. Infant cereal has iron, but it is poorly
absorbed and may cause the baby to be constipated.
There is no reason to introduce vegetables before
fruit. Breastmilk is far sweeter than fruit, so there is
no reason to believe that the baby will take vegetables
better by delaying the introduction of fruit.
Respect your babys likes and dislikes. There is
no essential food (except breastmilk). If your baby does
not like a certain food, do not push it on him. If you
think it important for him, wait a few weeks and offer it
again.
At about 8 months of age, babies become somewhat
assertive in displaying their individuality. Your baby
may not want you to put a spoon into his mouth. He very
likely will take it out of your hand and put it into his
mouth himself, often upside down, so that the food falls
on his lap. Respect his attempts at self sufficiency and
encourage his learning.
What if I am starting solids at 3 months?
At this age, it may be prudent to go a little more
slowly. Start with infant cereal or easily mashed foods
such as banana. Sometimes a baby will eat better from
your finger than off a spoon. Go a little more slowly
with quantities as well. But as the baby tolerates
solids, both quantity and variety of foods can be
increased as the baby desires. Incidentally, why are you
starting solids at 3 months?
Solids or breast first?
There seems to be considerable worry when a child is
starting solids about whether to give the breast first or
give solid food first. If breastfeeding and the
introduction of solid foods both are going well, it
probably does not matter much. Indeed, there is no reason
that a baby needs both breast and solids every time he
eats.

Handout #16. Solid Foods Revised January 1998
Written by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC
May be copied and distributed without further
permission
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