Santa Cruz Sentinel

What’s new in feeding babies

- BARBARA QUInn Barbara Quinn-Intermill is a registered dietitian nutritioni­st and certified diabetes educator affiliated with the Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula. She is the author of “QuinnEssen­tial Nutrition: The Uncomplica­ted Science of Eat

When I was a young nutrition profession­al, I would regularly critique my mom on how she cooked for us when we were kids.

“You overcooked the vegetables,” I remarked to her on one occasion. To which she answered, “My, it’s a wonder you kids ever grew up to live this long!”

Generation­s do find new ways to feed kids. Yet some basics of proper nourishmen­t remain year after year. And that’s what I found in the latest advice for feeding infants in the recently released Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2020-2025. Here are some highlights of what’s new and what stays true:

Breast milk is still the preferred (and only) food most babies need for the first six months of life. And breastfeed­ing should continue through the first year, if possible. Use an iron-fortified infant formula if breast milk is not available, say experts.

Iron-rich foods should be added to a baby’s diet around six months of age for optimal neurologic­al developmen­t and growth. (Iron stores from birth begin to wane by six months and breast milk is not a great source of this essential mineral.) Foods that are rich in iron include meats, seafood and ironenrich­ed cereals.

In addition to iron, babies need more zinc-rich foods around six months of age for proper growth and strong immunity. Zinc-fortified cereals, beans and meat are good sources of this essential mineral.

Around six months of age is also the best time to introduce baby to foods from all food groups (I call them nutrient groups because each category provides a mix of nutrients required for optimal growth and health.) These groups include baby-friendly vegetables, grains, fruit, protein and yogurt and cheese, including soybased varieties. Experts continue to advise withholdin­g cow’s milk until 1 year of age.

Other foods that need to be avoided during the first year of life include honey (due to a risk for botulism) and unpasteuri­zed foods and beverages.

And here’s a real switch: New evidence now shows that delaying the introducti­on of potentiall­y allergenic foods does not help to prevent food allergies. In fact, parents are now advised to introduce foods such as peanuts, eggs, cow milk products, tree nuts, wheat, shellfish, fish, and soy at the same time they introduce other foods into baby’s diet — around 4 to 6 months of age. Studies show that gradually introducin­g these foods along with other new foods when the baby is four to six months old can actually reduce the risk for developing allergies, including peanut allergies.

One last item: Babies are born with a taste for sweets. That’s why they latch on to breastmilk; it’s high in the natural sugar, lactose. We don’t need to feed baby’s sweet tooth with a lot of added sugars, however. Look for foods and beverages for your sweet little bundle of joy that are free of added sugars.

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