No major allergens flagged for this entry (still introduce one food at a time).
Lower-risk serving reminders
- Keep pieces soft and large enough to grasp for self-feeding.
- Avoid over-drying food; moisture helps safe chewing and swallowing.
- Stay nearby and watch paced bites even with lower-risk foods.
Allergen introduction checklist
- Introduce new foods in the daytime so you can watch for reactions.
- When introducing a new allergen, keep it as the only new food for that meal.
- If tolerated, repeat the food regularly in small amounts.
General feeding checklist
- Seat baby upright and stable for all meals.
- Model slow chewing and allow baby to control pace.
- Stop and reset if baby is upset, tired, or over-stuffed.
Readiness signs to check
- Baby can sit upright with minimal support during meals.
- Hands and mouth coordinate for bringing food to the mouth.
- Tongue-thrust reflex is reduced, so food is not immediately pushed out.
- Interest in self-feeding and opening mouth for food cues is visible.
Pause and seek advice if
- Coughing is persistent or distress does not settle quickly during meals.
- You notice repeated vomiting, rash, swelling, wheeze, or breathing changes after a food.
- Baby struggles with swallowing progression over multiple meals despite texture adjustments.
- There is a known medical condition affecting feeding, growth, or airway safety.
Age-specific pages (programmatic)
Separate URLs for SEO: same prep as below, one age per page.
Age brackets and prep
6–8 months
Fully cooked until tender; shred or offer finger-length strips without tough skins.
9–11 months
Shreds, flakes, or small soft bites; check carefully for bones in fish.
12–24 months
Small bites or strips; keep portions moist and avoid dry/overcooked edges.