The Sunday Guardian

Home-cooked meals for infants not healthier than baby food: Research

- ARUL LOUIS

Home- cooked meals specifical­ly made for infants and young children, are not always healthier than commercial­ly available baby foods, new research suggests.

The findings indicated that home cooked meals, which are often perceived as the best option, usually exceed energy density and dietary fat recommenda­tions.

Home cooked meals also provided 26% more energy and 44% more protein and total fat, including saturated fat, than commercial products.

“Unlike adult recommenda­tions, which encourage reducing energy density and fats, it is important in infants that food is suitably energy dense in appropriat­ely sized meals to aid growth and developmen­t,” said Sharon A. Carstair from the University of Aberdeen in Britain.

In addition, home cooked meals were found to be around half the price of commercial­ly available ready made meals.

While almost two-thirds (65%) of commercial products met dietary recommenda­tions on energy density, only just over a third of home cooked meals did so, and over half (52%) exceeded the maximum range.

Home cooked meals contained more protein as well as included a greater variety of vegetables than readymade meals, but commercial products contained a greater vegetable variety per meal, averaging three compared with two for home cooked recipes.

Ready-made meals are a convenient alternativ­e, but any parent looking to provide their child with a varied diet, should probably not rely solely on ready-made meals, the researcher­s said.

“Dietary fats contribute es- sential fatty acids and fat soluble vitamins together with energy and sensory qualities, thus are vital for the growing child, however, excessive intakes may impact on childhood obesity and health,” Carstair added.

For the study, the team compared the nutrient content, price, and food group variety of 278 ready-made savoury meals, 174 of which were organic, and 408 home cooked meals, made using recipes from 55 bestsellin­g cookbooks designed for the diets of infants and young children.

While 16% of the home cooked meals were poultry based compared with 27% of the ready- made meals, nearly one in five (19%) were seafood-based versus 7% of the ready-made meals.

On the other hand, a similar proportion (21%) were meat based compared with 35% of the commercial products and almost half (44%) were vegetable based compared with around a third (31%) of the ready-made meals.

However, “the high proportion of red meat-based meals and recipes and low seafood meals are of concern when dietary recommenda­tions encourage an increase in oil-rich fish consumptio­n and limitation of red and processed meats,” said the paper published online in the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood. IANS

While 16% of the home cooked meals were poultry based compared with 27% of the ready-made meals, nearly one in five (19%) were seafoodbas­ed versus 7 % of the ready-made meals.

 ??  ?? Ready-made meals are a convenient alternativ­e.
Ready-made meals are a convenient alternativ­e.

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