Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
One of the most misguided and damaging pieces of advice coming from the vast majority of “experts” is to give rice cereal as a baby first food around the age of 4-6 months. This advice is extremely harmful to the long term health of the child, contributing greatly to the epidemic of fat toddlers and the exploding problem of childhood obesity.
Rice cereal is never a healthy baby first food. Not only is it an extremely high glycemic food when eaten alone (spikes the blood sugar) but it also contains ample amounts of double sugar (disaccharide) molecules, which are extremely hard for such an immature digestive system to digest. The small intestine of a baby mostly produces only one carbohydrate enzyme, lactase, for digestion of the lactose in milk. It produces little to no amylase, the enzyme needed for grain digestion until around age one.
Now, at least one governmental body is waking up to the harmful notion of cereal grains as the “ideal” baby first food.
Health Canada Recommends Traditional First Foods
Health Canada in collaboration with the Canadian Pediatric Society, Dietitians of Canada and Breastfeeding Committee for Canada has issued new guidelines for transitioning a baby to solid food and two of the first weaning foods recommended?
Meat and eggs!
While these guidelines are certain to rile vegetarian and vegan groups, the fact is that meat and eggs are indeed the best weaning foods for a baby. Not only are these animal foods extremely easy to digest compared with cereal grains, but they also supply iron right at the time when a baby’s iron stores from birth start to run low.
The inclusion of meat in these baby first food guidelines is in line with the wisdom of Ancestral Cultures which frequently utilized animal foods for weaning. A traditional first food in African cultures is actually raw liver which the mother would pre-chew in small amounts and then feed to her child.
The guidelines specifically note the role that ancient wisdom played in the decision to no longer recommend cereal grains and instead suggest meat:
While meat and fish are traditional first foods for some Aboriginal groups, the common practice in North America has been to introduce infant cereal, vegetables, and fruit as first complementary foods.
Soft boiled egg yolks are also an ideal choice as a baby first food as they supply ample iron as well as choline and arachidonic acid which are both critical for optimal development of the baby’s brain which grows as its most rapid rate the first year of life.
Unfortunately, while the suggestion of meat and eggs is a good one, the joint statement from Health Canada also inexplicably includes tofu and legumes which are both a terrible choice as a baby first food.
The starch in legumes would cause the same digestive problems as rice cereal and the endocrine-disrupting isoflavones in tofu would be a disaster for baby’s delicate and developing hormonal system.
But, let’s give credit where credit is due.At least meat and eggs are appropriately included on the baby first food list.
Good on you Health Canada! Perhaps your neighbor country to the South will wake up and get a clue about how to properly feed babies based on your lead.
I’m not holding my breath.
Reference
Meat, tofu among recommended iron rich foods for Canadian babies
Hanan Abdulmalik via Facebook
if only Health Canada would make raw milk legal
Megan
It’s not exactly illegal. You can buy a small ‘share’ of a cow or goat and receive milk that way. It’s only illegal for the farmer to sell. I’ve done the share thing and it works well.
Brenna Iverson via Facebook
Wow how awesome!!! 😀
Danita Garcia via Facebook
The AAP recommend this back in 2010 but for whatever reason they changed their minds.
My sons first food was ground up chicken, that he attempted to feed himself. BLW no mush here!
Keri Hessel via Facebook
Lamb purée was one of my daughter’s earliest foods. 🙂
Keri Hessel via Facebook
Awesome!
Jody Tengberg via Facebook
Avocado…..
Dawn Stone via Facebook
Ground turkey was the first food I gave my daughter.
joyce wang
why do we even care about the guidelines set up health canada when the guideline includes things that should be not included? that to me shows that the entire advice is not to be taken seriously, why are we just taking what we want to hear and ignore what we don’t want to hear?
and exactly when do babies have amylase properly developed? if we avoid gluten for babies for at least the first year or two, what about sources of energy?
Gretchen
Why does this article need to end with a slam on the U.S.?