6 mth old baby feeding schedule


6-month-old feeding schedule: Timetable

A baby’s 6-month birthday marks an important transition as many infants are ready to start trying solids at this point.

While breast milk or formula should still form the core of a 6-month-old’s diet, some caregivers find that a child’s feeding schedule shifts as they begin eating purees and other solids.

Share on PinterestWhen a baby reaches 6 months of age, purees and other solid foods can usually become part of their diet.

Babies typically need to eat every 2–3 hours, five to six times during the day.

It is normal for a baby’s schedule to change from day to day, or for babies to eat different amounts of food each day.

Caregivers can follow a baby’s cues, even if they have established a schedule already. A parent or caregiver does not need to deny food to a baby just because it has already eaten.

Introducing solids

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) advise that parents exclusively breastfeed infants for about 6 months if possible. By the time a baby hits their half birthday, they may be ready to try solids.

A baby may be ready for solids at 6 months if:

  • they have good head control
  • they can hold their head up for extended periods
  • they can sit up with no or very little assistance
  • they no longer have the tongue thrust reflect to push food out of the mouth with the tongue
  • they show interest at mealtime and lean toward food if a caregiver offers it

At this age, breast milk or formula is still a baby’s most important form of nutrition and solids are an addition.

Not all 6-month-olds are ready for solids. If a baby shows no interest, a caregiver can wait a few weeks and try again.

Giving a baby 1–2 tablespoons of iron fortified cereal or fruit or vegetable purees per feeding can be a good place to start.

Gradually increasing this as the baby’s interest and appetite increase can follow.

To ensure a baby eats sufficient food, the adult can breastfeed or give a bottle before offering solids.

Caregivers can give solid food as a supplement each time they nurse the baby or give a bottle. Or, they can include the baby in family meals by giving solids at mealtime.

At 6 months of age, when an infant may begin to want solids, a caregiver can offer these just once per day.

Choosing a time of day when the caregiver is relaxed and not pressed for time, and the baby is not overly hungry, fussy, or tired often works best.

Once a baby is enjoying their once-a-day solids, the frequency can increase to two and then three times a day.

There is no “right” schedule, but caregivers should plan to increase the number of solids babies get gradually.

At 6 months, the goal is not to introduce new foods and eating habits. Similarly, there is no need to force a baby to eat solids or restrict new food if a baby indicates they want more.

Regardless of their size and eating habits, babies need access to an expanding variety of solid foods.

Most babies will need to try new foods several times before they feel comfortable eating them. It is fine to let a child eat at their own pace, in the way that feels right to them.

It is acceptable at this age for a baby to play with their food since this is a way of exploring new things.

Breast milk and formula

Breast milk or formula remains the most important food at 6 months of age. The easiest way to ensure a baby eats enough is to nurse or formula feed them on demand when they show signs of hunger.

Research supports the value of feeding on demand.

A longitudinal study of 10,419 children found better academic achievement and a four-point Intelligent Quotient (IQ) advantage at 8 years old among children whose caregivers fed them on demand.

However, the caregivers of these children got less sleep and had lower overall well-being.

These results may point to adults finding a happy medium, such as steadily shaping the baby’s preferred schedule into one that works for them.

In general, caregivers should plan to breastfeed babies 3 to 5 times per day, and sometimes more. However, babies vary greatly and every 3–4 hours is common, which can amount to up to eight times in 24 hours.

Some babies prefer cluster feedings, during which they nurse several times in a short period. Growing or sick babies may also nurse more frequently.

If a baby has formula, giving 24–32 ounces of iron fortified formula spread over five or six feeds per day is typical. While some babies sleep through the night at 6 months, others will still wake or want to feed.

A nighttime “dream feed” around the time caregivers retire for the evening may help babies sleep longer.

Other liquids

Babies do not need juice at 6 months. The extra calories can decrease a baby’s appetite, and the sugar may damage a child’s developing teeth. Soda and other drinks are not healthful for babies.

Babies can have water beginning at 6 months, or when caregivers introduce solids, whichever is later. Introducing a cup of water along with solid meals may be helpful.

Around 6 months old, some babies begin transitioning from three or four daily naps to two. The baby might take a midmorning nap and a midafternoon nap. At this age, most babies need 12–15 hours of sleep per day, and naps usually last 1–3 hours.

Caregivers are best finding a schedule that works for them and the child. Some children are used to falling asleep by nursing or with a bottle. Others happily doze off on their own.

A caregiver can follow the baby’s cues and work to adapt their needs to the family’s schedule slowly.

These feeding tips may help:

  • Babies may be hungrier after waking from a long nap. This can be a good time to try solids after offering formula or breast milk to ease their initial hunger.
  • There is no evidence that adding cereal to a bottle helps babies sleep longer. Doing so can increase their risk of choking.
  • Babies must never have food without close supervision. nor have solids, even very thin purees, in bed.

Deciding what, when, and how to feed a baby can be challenging, especially during the transition to solids. As long as babies get regular breast milk or formula, caregivers do not need to rush the transition to solids or worry that babies are not eating enough.

Some babies take longer than others to embrace solids, while some will eagerly eat anything. The right schedule is one that works for the baby and family. This schedule may change over time which is also fine.

Example 6 Month Old Feeding Schedule

As you make the transition to introducing solid foods around six months, life starts to change! 

The thought of introducing new foods on top of breast milk or formula and naps can leave even the calmest of new parents apprehensive. 

Here are some things to keep in mind as you start to introduce those first foods to your baby, and a sample schedule to help you wrap your head around what to do!

More: For more help with baby led weaning and how to help your baby succeed with eating, be sure to check out this article with a comprehensive guide to baby led weaning and first baby foods!

6 month old baby’s feeding schedule pointers

Before we get to the actual schedule, here are a few things to keep in mind.  

When to Start Solid Foods With Baby

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends starting solid foods around 6 months. In this case solid food means traditional baby food or baby led weaning style finger foods. Really, anything other than breast milk or infant formula!

The best way to tell if your baby is ready to start solid foods is by following their developmental signs of readiness. 

Once they are ready for foods, grab a good high chair, take a look at the schedule below, and you can start them with some modified table foods or a baby cereal and pureed foods.

Learn How to Set The Best Foundation For Feeding Your Baby!

Learning what to feed your baby is helpful. But what about all the rest?! Things like how they should be positioned for eating, what you should say at meals, and how to set up an environment that fosters a positive feeding relationship-for life!

These are the things your parents and friends don't have the answers for, and they're the things that make the biggest difference!

Grab the Foundations course where I walk you through it all.

Breast Milk or Formula Is Still Their Primary Source of Nutrition

A 6 month old baby’s main source of nutrition is still going to be breast milk or formula. Introducing food is to help them get used to it, form a positive association with food, and to start getting some additional nutrients that they start to need right around that 6-month mark.

But your baby’s needs don’t all of a sudden change to where they need an additional three meals a day and a ton of food and eating opportunities! 

The idea is to start slowly and follow your baby’s cues as you introduce more food and eating opportunities. 

Keep giving breast milk or formula as you were before. That can mean on demand if you’re breastfeeding, or following the same general schedule you were before for formula-fed babies and breastfed babies. 

Their amount of formula or breastmilk won’t necessarily change. The average baby at this time is usually going to be nursing 5-6 times a day, or taking 24-32 ounces of formula. In many cases, it might actually increase because they are having growth spurts and will start to need more!

After you give them their breast milk or formula, add in a meal 30-60 minutes later. This doesn’t need to be set in stone, as what works for your baby might differ from someone else’s!

The general idea is to offer breast milk or formula first, give them a bit of a break, and then offer them solid foods.

Your 6 Month Old Baby Won’t Eat That Much!

At the beginning, babies take time to learn how to eat. Most babies will need to get the handle of how to get food to their mouth and down their throat. They won’t really be eating solid meals for several weeks in most cases. 

Don’t panic if you’re a few weeks in and they still aren’t getting much solid food down. Give it some time. Remember, their primary source of nutrition is still their breast milk or formula!

 And if you aren’t sure what to expect when it comes to solid foods, make sure to grab the Starting Solids course to help prepare you and give you confidence in feeding and to help you set up a great foundation for your feeding relationship with them.

Sample Feeding Schedule For A 6-Month-Old Baby

The biggest thing to keep in mind is that every baby is going to be different. I generally shy away from giving out specific schedules, because different things work for different babies. 

But after many parents have asked consistently for it, here is an example schedule for your 6 month old to help you with a place to start for your daily routines. 

I’m giving specific times to help you visualize it, but think of this more as a spacing example for your day than an exact example of when you should be doing these things.

A Note On Your Baby’s Sleep Schedule

All babies will have different sleep schedules. This is especially true for the first year of your baby’s life. Some babies will have a short nap in the morning, while others will take a long nap.

Sometimes that happens no matter how hard you try to maximize the hours of sleep your baby gets!

The best thing you can do is to be consistent in your wake windows. Meaning if your baby gets up at 7 am, you want to be consistent with something like a 2 hour wake window. This means that they will go back down for their first nap 2 hours after waking up.

Follow this same pattern for their later naps and plan to put them down based on when they woke up, not necessarily the time the clock says.

As the day goes on, their wake window might get slightly longer. And as they grow, they will generally start to take longer naps and lengthen their wake time between naps.

Sample 6 Month Old Feeding Schedule With Breakfast

Here is an example of how I might space my day if I was planning to feed my baby solid foods at breakfast time. When they are first starting to eat and for the first several weeks of solid foods, they really do only need one meal a day.

Daily Schedule With Breakfast

  • 6:30 am: Wake-up, then nurse or bottle
  • 7:30-8:00 am: Breakfast (Head to this article for specific help with what to serve your baby at meals. )
  • 8:30 am: First morning nap
  • 10:30 am: Nurse or bottle
  • 12:00 pm: Second nap
  • 1:30 pm: Nurse or bottle
  • 4:00 pm: Third nap
  • 5:00 pm: Nurse or bottle
  • 6:30 pm: Nurse or bottle, then bedtime routine and sleep

Sample Feeding Schedule With Dinner

Here is a sample feeding schedule with dinner as your meal for the day. Again, this is just an example. To serve a different meal, simply aim to have the food 30-60 minutes after you have given them breast milk or formula.

You do not need to serve food at the same meal every day, or exactly at the same time. If your baby sleeps through your normal lunch time when you were planning to feed them, just plan to feed them at dinner.

I do recommend aiming to get in at least one meal a day once you start giving them solid foods to help them get in the practice that they need.

Daily Schedule With Dinner

  • 6:30 am: Wake-up, then nurse or bottle
  • 8:30 am: First morning nap
  • 10:30 am: Nurse or bottle
  • 12:00 pm: Second nap
  • 1:30 pm: Nurse or bottle
  • 4:00 pm: Third nap
  • 5:00 pm: Nurse or bottle
  • 5:30 pm: Dinner (Here are some dinner ideas for babies)
  • 6:30 pm: Nurse or bottle, then bedtime routine and sleep

These Schedules Are Just Starting Places!

This is just a final reminder for you that these really are just places for you to start. Every baby and family will find a different flow that works for them.

Being consistent in wake windows is the most important thing at this age. Sleeping really is primary!

A tired baby isn’t going to want to sit at the table and focus on learning how to eat. So do your best to let sleeping and breast milk or formula be the main concerns, and add in meals in between those.

As your baby gets older, the feeding schedule for 7 month olds really doesn’t change much. 

They might drop a nap, have longer wake windows, and will likely start wanting to have more meals. 

To increase meals to 2 a day, simply keep the same things in mind and add a meal 30-60 minutes after breast milk or formula when they are awake.

Looking for help on a feeding schedule for your toddler or 1-year-old? Check out this article with a sample 1 year old feeding schedule!

Complementary foods at 6 months | Useful tips from the Tyoma brand

Pediatricians around the world, including experts from the World Health Organization, unanimously believe that the introduction of complementary foods should be carried out in the interval of 4-6 months.

Early introduction of complementary foods (up to 4 months). fraught with the development of allergic reactions and indigestion.

Late introduction of complementary foods, from 7 months, can lead to a deficiency in the child's diet of essential nutrients, an iron deficiency state at the age of 9-10 months, eating disorders, delayed development of chewing skills and swallowing of thick foods.

With the normal development of the child and the absence of signs of iron deficiency anemia, complementary foods can be introduced from 6 months. This applies to both formula-fed and breast-fed babies.

Signs that a baby is ready to breastfeed include

  • Absence of the spoon-ejection reflex
  • the presence of a bright food interest in the baby to the food of adults

It is important to remember that a child’s lack of teeth and the ability to sit are not signs of a baby’s unpreparedness for eating thick food.

It is very important to understand the main goals of the introduction of complementary foods:

  1. Provide the child with the necessary nutrients.
  2. Develop a child's food interest, introduce him to new tastes.

In no case should the introduction of complementary foods be of a violent nature, since this will not only not contribute to the development of a child’s food interest, but can also lead to a complete refusal of the baby from complementary foods, which will destroy the main goals of complementary foods.

How to start introducing complementary foods at 6 months of age?

The first product of complementary foods, regardless of the start date of the introduction of complementary foods and the type of feeding of the baby (breast or artificial), should be energy-intensive foods: porridge, or vegetable puree.

If the child has a liquefied or unstable stool, and there is also a lack of body weight, then it is better to choose porridge as the first complementary food. After 3-4 days from the beginning of the introduction of porridge, butter can be gradually added to it (up to 5 g per serving of porridge in 150 g)

If the child has a tendency to constipation, then it is better to choose vegetable marrow puree as the first complementary food, which can have a mild laxative effect on the child's stool. Starting from the 3-4th day of the introduction of vegetable puree, vegetable oil can be gradually added to it (up to 5 g per serving of vegetables in 150 g)

What products are better to give preference to at 6 months?

Kashi

The first cereals can be buckwheat, rice or corn. They must be dairy-free and can be diluted with water or breast milk, or the mixture that the baby eats. Later, you can introduce oatmeal and millet porridge

Vegetables

The first vegetable puree can be zucchini, broccoli, or cauliflower. Later, kohlrabi, potatoes, green beans, white cabbage, green peas, celery can be introduced into the diet.

Fruit

The third type of complementary foods can be fruit puree from apples, pears or bananas. Later, you can introduce mashed apricot, peach. For starters, fruit puree may not be given to the child separately, but it is better to mix it with cereal or vegetables so that the child does not begin to prefer the sweet taste of fruits. When the amount of fruit puree reaches 50 g or more, it can also be given separately, for example, after the child has eaten porridge or cottage cheese.

Juices

Juices should not be the first feeding, in addition, they can not be introduced into the baby's first year of life at all, given their sweet taste and low nutritional value.

Basic rules for the introduction of complementary foods from 6 months

  1. A faster introduction of the main complementary foods into the child's diet compared to their introduction from 4 or 5 months, namely, bringing the amount of one product to the age volume can be carried out in 5-7 days.
  2. Introduction of complementary foods before breastfeeding or formula.
  3. Feeding the child is carried out not at the request of the child, but at the request of the mother. What it means: you should try to introduce complementary foods regularly and at the same time, allocating for this conditionally time for the future breakfast, lunch and dinner (afternoon snack).

How to start the introduction of a new product?

The introduction of a new product should be gradual.

  • On day 2 - 3 tsp. (15 g)
  • On day 3 - 6 tsp. (30 g)
  • Day 4 - 50 g
  • Day 5 - 100 g
  • On the 7th day - 150 g

Important!

If on the 5-7th day of the introduction of a new product, the baby still cannot eat 100-150 ml of porridge or puree at once, then this amount can be divided into 2 doses, for example, give 100 ml of porridge in the morning and 50 ml in the evening.

From the second week of the introduction of a new product, one milk feeding can be completely replaced with complementary foods.

Approximate weekly feeding schedule

If we start complementary foods with vegetable puree, then the schedule might look something like this:

  • Morning feeding (6:00 am): breast milk or infant formula 180-200 ml
  • Breakfast (10:00): breast milk or infant formula 180-200 ml
  • Lunch (14:00): broccoli 10-150 grams. Supplementing with breast milk or infant formula
  • Afternoon snack (18:00): breast milk or infant formula 180-200 ml
  • Night feeding (22:00): breast milk or infant formula 180-200 ml

2 weeks

From the second week, you need to start introducing dairy-free porridge.

  • Morning feeding (6:00 am): breast milk or infant formula 180-200 ml
  • Breakfast (10:00): porridge 10-150 g, supplemented with breast milk or infant formula
  • Lunch (14:00): Broccoli 150 grams. Vegetable oil 5 g Supplementary feeding with breast milk or infant formula up to 50 ml
  • Afternoon snack (18:00): breast milk or infant formula 180-200 ml
  • Night feeding (22:00): breast milk or infant formula

3 week

From the third week, you need to start introducing meat puree, which is most convenient to add to vegetable puree

  • Morning feeding (6:00 am): breast milk or infant formula 180-200 ml
  • Breakfast (10:00): porridge 150 g, supplemented with breast milk or infant formula
  • Lunch (14:00): Broccoli 150 grams. Vegetable oil 5 g Meat puree 5-20 g Supplementation with breast milk or infant formula up to 50 ml
  • Afternoon snack (18:00): breast milk or infant formula 180-200 ml
  • Night feeding (22:00): breast milk or infant formula

4 week

From the fourth week, you can introduce fruit puree, which is most convenient to add to porridge

  • Morning feeding (6:00 am): breast milk or infant formula 180-200 ml
  • Breakfast (10:00): porridge 150 g, fruit puree up to 50 g
  • Lunch (14:00): Broccoli 150 grams. Vegetable oil 5 g Meat puree 20 g Supplementation with breast milk or infant formula
  • Afternoon snack (18:00): breast milk or infant formula 180-200 ml
  • Night feeding (22:00): breast milk or infant formula

From the fifth week, you can begin to introduce the second type of porridge, which is most convenient to start adding to the first type, gradually displacing its amount.

From the sixth week, you can enter another type of vegetable puree. And so on.

By 7 months two milk feedings can be completely replaced with complementary foods.

Introduction of complementary foods at 6 months with breast and artificial feeding

Complementary foods at 6 months with artificial feeding

In Soviet times, it was believed that complementary foods should be started already from three to four months. Modern doctors do not agree with this position and believe that the most optimal time to start complementary foods is 6 months.

There are also recommendations that it is better to start complementary foods with artificial feeding from 4 months. But this opinion is increasingly being criticized, because it has been proven that the baby's body may not be ready to assimilate new food. Therefore, it is better not to rush with complementary foods, of course, if there are no special indications, for example, insufficient birth weight.

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The World Health Organization recommends that all healthy babies, regardless of what type of feeding they are on, should begin complementary foods at 6 months of age.

Therefore, we advise you not to rush things and not pay attention to the marketing moves of baby food manufacturers, who claim that it can be consumed from 4 months.

Source: Pexels

Complementary foods at 6 months while breastfeeding

As we have already written, most modern pediatricians tend to start introducing complementary foods at 6 months. This does not mean that with the onset of the 23rd week of a baby’s life, you should run to the store and urgently start feeding him something. It's more like the end of the month. In this matter, it is best to look at the signs of readiness of a particular child, which we will talk about later, on the recommendations of a personal pediatrician.

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It shouldn't be too long, of course. Experienced mothers will say that complementary foods are directly related to teaching the child to chew, and if you miss this moment, you will have to suffer for a long time in the future.

It is important to consider that breastfeeding is maintained once complementary foods are introduced. It is only supplemented by products that contain the necessary vitamins and minerals necessary for the growth of the child.

Source: Pexels

Getting started with complementary foods

Even pediatricians did not find an answer to the question of how to introduce complementary foods at 6 months correctly. Some people think that complementary foods should start with mashed vegetables. Others insist that there is nothing better than porridge. The famous doctor Komarovsky, for example, generally writes that kefir is closest in composition to breast milk, which means it’s worth starting with it. His recommendations are close to Soviet protocols, but are not often found among modern pediatricians.

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Of course, it is best to consult your personal pediatrician, especially if you trust his opinion. After all, only he knows about the features of your particular baby and can recommend, for example, a hypoallergenic menu.

If we talk about general recommendations, they are as follows: if the child has a lack of weight, then it is better to start complementary foods with cereals, and if there are no problems or, on the contrary, there is an excess of weight, then in this case it is worth choosing vegetable puree.

Source: Pexels

Signs of Weaning Readiness

  • The baby has doubled its birth weight.
  • Baby can eat from a spoon and does not try to push food out with his tongue.
  • The child shows interest in food and actively observes how adults eat.

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Important! Starting complementary foods is not only a medical issue, but also a psychological one. It lays the foundation for proper eating behavior in the future. Therefore, do not rush your child, do not try to strictly follow the scheme and in no case force him to eat. Your task is to offer the baby food, introduce him to new tastes and try again and again. If a product does not work, it is better to put it aside and return after a while. Forget about timelines. The main thing is that all participants in the process have fun.

Source: Pexels

Complementary feeding schedule from 6 months by day

  • The scheme is based on WHO recommendations for children from 6 months.

1 week

Weaning foods should be started with a puree of one of the hypoallergenic vegetables. It can be broccoli, zucchini or cauliflower. You can make your own puree, or you can buy ready-made in the store.

If you are going to cook, keep in mind that vegetables should be chosen without pesticides. It is better not to use frozen vegetables, they could be thawed several times during transportation, which means that they have lost all the vitamins.

If you buy ready-made mashed potatoes, remember that you can store it in the refrigerator for no more than a day.

On the first day start entering the vegetable in the amount of three grams. Then increase the volume incrementally: 3-10-20-40-80-100 grams. When you reach full volume, you can move on to the next week. Do not forget that after each meal with complementary foods, the baby must be supplemented with breast milk or an adapted milk formula. At the end of the first week, you should also start adding half a teaspoon of vegetable oil to the puree to improve digestion.

Source: Pexels

A meal schedule might look like this:

  • Morning feed (6:00 am): breast milk or second stage infant formula (adapted best) 200 grams.
  • Breakfast (10:00): breast milk or formula 2 200 grams.
  • Lunch (14:00): broccoli 3-100 grams. Supplementing with breast milk or second stage infant formula.
  • Afternoon snack (18:00): breast milk or infant formula second stage 200 grams.
  • Night feeding (22:00): breast milk or formula 2 200 grams.

Week 2

A second vegetable can be added from the second week. For example, if in the first week the child tried zucchini, now he can be offered cauliflower. At the same time, the amount of the main vegetable decreases, and the volume of the injected product increases. In this case, the baby should be fed with the second vegetable after the main one. Everything happens in proportion: 3-90 grams, 10-70, 30-100, 50-50, 100. That is, at the beginning of the week you will give a new product in the amount of 3 grams, and at the end already 100. On the last day, the first vegetable is completely replaced by the second.

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Week 3

During the third week, you should alternate vegetables already introduced, for example, one day - zucchini, the other - cauliflower.
This week it is worth starting to introduce dairy-free porridge. It can be buckwheat, corn or rice porridge. It is administered during the second meal, that is, breakfast. It’s worth starting with 3 grams and proceeding according to the scheme: 3-10-20-40-80-150. From the third day, it is worth adding half a teaspoon of butter to the porridge.

Source: Pexels

Week 4

In the fourth week, a second kind of porridge is added to complementary foods. For example, if last week you gave your baby buckwheat, now you can offer corn porridge. The scheme for replacing our tested one with the one you are introducing this week looks like this: 3-150 grams, 10-140, 30-120, 70-80, 150. The amount of vegetable puree for lunch also increases and is brought up to 150 grams.

Week 5

In the fifth week, the yolk is introduced for breakfast. It can be either a chicken egg or a quail egg. Starting from crumbs, bring the volume to ¼. At the same time, cereals alternate every day, just like vegetable puree.

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Week 6

This is an important week for complementary foods as it introduces your baby to meat for lunch. For this, you can choose mashed turkey or rabbit. The scheme is as follows: 3-10-20-30 grams. That is, more than 30 grams of meat should not be given, this can be a strong burden on the kidneys. Vegetables and porridge alternate. The yolk is given every other day.

Source: Pexels

Week 7

The baby's menu is expanding more and more, and at the seventh week it completely resembles a full-fledged adult diet. After all, now you can offer him fruit puree for an afternoon snack. The choice here is quite large - apple puree, pear, prunes. Start with 10 grams and work up to 60 grams by the end of the week.

Week 8

At the eighth week, the child is introduced to the third type of dairy-free porridge. For example, if before that he had already tried buckwheat and corn, he should be offered rice. The volume of porridge starts from 10 grams and is brought up to 150 by replacing the main one with an additional one.

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Week 9

Starting from the ninth week, the baby can be given baby cottage cheese for an afternoon snack along with fruit puree. Start giving 3 grams and work your way up to 40 grams.

Source: Pexels

Week 10

By this week, the baby has already tried all the main products. And you can start introducing him to additional ones. Gradually, you can try to give your baby oatmeal and wheat porridge, milk porridge with fruit, carrot, pumpkin puree, a mixture of vegetables, beef, veal or chicken, ready-made dishes with fish or meat in the form of mashed potatoes, dessert fruit purees, children's cookies.


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