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  • Feeding at a Glance: Birth to 24 Months

Feeding at a Glance: Birth to 24 Months

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The chart below offers helpful suggestions for feeding an infant from birth through 24 months of age. It also indicates the stage of physical development and explains why certain foods may be preferable at specific stages of development.

AgeFood SequenceFood PresentationDevelopmental Skills, Implications for Feeding
Birth to 6 months Breastmilk and/or iron-fortified formula satisfies all nutritional requirements. Solid foods not nutritionally needed, but infant may want Breast and/or bottle Designed to suck, not chew
Rooting reflex; searches for food source
Tongue-thrust reflex pushes out solid foods
Sensitive gag reflex
6 months Starter foods:
avocados, bananas, pears, applesauce
Strained, pureed, fingertipful, spoonful Tongue-thrust and gag reflexes lessen; accepts solids. Sits erect in high chair. Begins teething.
7 to 9 months mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, peaches, prunes, barley cereal, rice cereal, carrots, squash, teething biscuits, pear and apple juice May drink from cup
Finger foods begin
Pureed and mashed foods
Holds bottle
Thumb-and-forefinger pickup begins
Fascination with tiny food morsels
Begins mouthing chokable food and objects (parents beware!)
Bangs, drops, flings
Reaches for food and utensils
Munches food
9 to 12 months fish (salmon, tuna), lamb, veal, tofu, poultry, noodles, bagel, beans, rice cakes, peas, eggs, yams, cheese, oatmeal, yogurt, spinach Lumpier consistency
Finger foods mastered
Bite-sized, cooked vegetables
Melt-in-mouth foods
Holds trainer cup
Self-feeding skills improve
Holds bottle and cup longer
Points and pokes, smears, enjoys mess
High-chair gymnastics increase
Tries to use utensils, spills most
12 to 18 months whole milk, papaya, cottage cheese, apricots, ice cream, grapefruit, grape halves, beef, strawberries, tomatoes, pasta, graham crackers, broccoli, wheat cereal, honey, cauliflower, pancakes, melon, muffins, mango, kiwi Participates in family meals
Eats chopped and mashed family foods
Begins self-feeding with utensils
Has prolonged attention span
“Do it myself” desire intensifies
Tilts cup and head while drinking, spills less
Holds spoon better, still spills much
Begins walking – doesn’t want to sit still and eat
Picks at others’ plates
18 to 24 months

Eats toddler portions of sandwiches, stews, nutritious puddings, sauces, smoothies, shakes, pate, dips, toppings, spreads, soups

Toddler food “language:” avocado boats, cooked carrot wheels, cheese blocks, broccoli trees, o-shaped cereal, toast sticks, cookie-cutter cheese melts, sailboat salads, peanut butter

Grazes – deserves title “picky eater”
Nibble tray
Weans from bottle
Uses spoon and fork
Molars appear – begins rotary chewing
Spoon-feeds self without spilling much
Learns food talk, signals for “more,” “all done”
Wants to eat on the run—needs creative feeding to hold attention at table
Has erratic feeding habits

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