I Am Your Baby
- I need breast milk or formula with iron until I turn one. You can still breastfeed me after I am one year old.
- I know when I am hungry or full. I let you know by the way I act. Please feed me when I act hungry. Let me eat until I am full.
- I will have many growth spurts my first year of life. I might nurse more often or longer.
- I am growing fast. If I take breast milk or formula from a bottle, I can drink 6-8 ounces at a feeding and need to have 24-32 ounces a day.
- When I am 6 or 7 months old, offer me a soft spout sippy cup or a cup with a straw. I like water, breast milk, or formula at meals and snacks. I don’t need more than 4-8 ounces of plain water a day.
With Your Help I’ll Learn to Eat Foods
Be Sure I’m Ready
- Sit up and hold my head steady.
- Show I want food by opening my mouth or taking it from a spoon.
- Show I don’t want food by closing my mouth or turning my head away from you.
I Will Go Through 4 Stages of Foods:
1
2
Mashed: smooth with some tiny lumps
3
4
Make My First Food a Single Food
- Give me only one new food at a time. This helps me adjust to new foods.
- Make it thin by adding breast milk or formula. You can gradually make it thicker.
- I might eat about a teaspoon to start with and then more as I get used to eating from a spoon.
- Build on the foods I tolerate. Offer what you know I like along with a new food. I will like the variety.
- Watch for signs of food allergies like vomiting, wheezing, diarrhea, skin rash, or swelling. If I have a reaction to a new food, call my healthcare provider or take me to the emergency room.
I Need to Eat My Way
Let Me Eat Food With My Fingers
- Tiny pieces of cooked vegetables or soft fruit
- Tiny pieces of cooked meat, chicken, or turkey
- Mashed cooked beans, egg yolk, or tofu
- Chopped noodles or rice
- Bite-size pieces of toast, plain crackers, or soft tortilla
How much should I eat?
HERE ARE SOME IDEAS:
6 - 8 MONTHS
8 - 10 Months
10 - 12 Months
Time for a Cup
When I turn 6 months old, you can give me a small amount of water as I learn to drink from a cup.
Food Safety
We need to wash our hands before making my food or feeding me.
Put my food in a small dish and feed it to me with a baby spoon.
Throw out any food, breast milk, or formula left in a bottle, cup, or dish after I eat.
Don’t heat my food in a microwave. It could burn my mouth.
FOODS TO AVOID
- Raw vegetables
- Bacon
- Whole grapes
- Fish with bones
- Potato, corn, or tortilla chips
- Popcorn
- Hard candy
- Nuts
- Hot dogs
- Meat sticks

Rare or raw meats

Cow’s milk

Honey or food made with it. Honey sometimes contains bacteria (Clostridium botulinum) that can make babies sick. I shouldn’t have honey until I’m at least 12 months of age.
INTRODUCING PEANUT BUTTER
After I have tried other solid foods, introduce me to peanut butter. Doing this can be helpful if our family has food or egg related allergies, like eczema or other skin issues.
Spread a small, thin smear of peanut butter thinly on a cracker or mix it with applesauce and cinnamon and spread thinly on bread. Watch me for the next 2 hours to make sure I don’t have a reaction.
Play With Me!
Put me on a blanket on the floor. Put a toy just out of my reach so I can move to get it. Roll a ball to me. Hold both my hands and let me walk with you.
LOOK WHAT I CAN DO!
6 to 9 Months
- I can sit up and roll over.
- I’ll start to creep and crawl.
- I like to shake things and drop them to see what happens.
9 to 12 Months
- I like to use my hands.
- I can hold my cup.
- I like to point and wave bye-bye.
- I say da-da and ma-ma.
- I can pull myself up to stand.
Keep Me Safe and Healthy
- I need check-ups and shots to stay healthy. I should visit my healthcare provider at 6 months, 9 months, and 1 year of age.
- Clean my gums and teeth with a clean, wet, soft cloth or a soft rubber or silicone finger brush after I eat. Begin using a soft toothbrush with fluoride toothpaste as soon as my first teeth appear.
- Never put me to bed with a bottle. I could choke, get an earache, or damage my teeth.
- If other people feed me, be sure to ask what and how much I eat.
- Let me explore and learn. See each room like I will, from the floor, and make it safe for me.
- Keep me away from cigarette, tobacco, and all other smoke or vapor. Smoke hurts my lungs and can make me sick.
- Buckle me into an infant car seat before we ride in a car. It’s the law! Install my seat in the car’s back seat, rear-facing.