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Comments

Bobbi

Moxie, did you have any concerns giving the Floradix with honey as an ingredient, or is it processed in such a way to kill any botulism spores? Just curious - I'm not familiar with it, but I know they say absolutely no honey until one year old...

Thanks!

Monica

Hard to believe, but my kid actually likes that gross, stinky iron supplement.

Moxie

Ooh, Bobbi. I never even thought about it. I wasn't giving it until he was over a year, so I didn't think about it at all. That's obviously a concern if your baby is younger.

ValleyGal

Have you tried mixing the cereal with fruit? My kid will eat the cereal plain begrudgingly, but if I put some fruit on it (or in it), he'll gobble it down. If you pick a fruit that's high in Vitamin C (to help the iron absorbtion), you might get some more cereal consumed... (And I don't mean the cereal with the "fruit" already mixed in to the flakes, I mean plain cereal plus whatever plain fruit he's eating). Also, you might try the spinach/carrot one-two punch. If she likes carrots, give her a couple of bites, then slip in a bite of spinach, then more carrots...

And if she doesn't like the spoon, she may be interested in early self feeding. It could be messy, but you could let her either eat with her hands or let her "hold" the spoon while you guide it in. Time consuming, but it might work...

Amy

Moxie is NOT kidding about the staining power of iron supplements. My tot had to take the iron supplement (the whole .6 mL dose) twice a day, so we got used to making sure she was not in clothing that we cared one iota about.

We did have luck getting it into her by mixing it with a bit of applesauce (which increases the staining power, I swear) and by giving it first thing with the meal, when she was hungry. Maybe she got used to it, but she usually took it no problem.

Someone else mentioned Vitamin C helping with absorption, and it's also worth mentioning that dairy interferes with iron absorption, so delay any milk or cheese for a half an hour or so.

Slim

The kid who wouldn't eat fortified baby cereal was happy to eat Chex, which are also fortified and, to some kids, more appealing than Cheerios/Oatios/Organic Morning Os.
Monica, I am in awe of your child. I tasted the supplement, and I admit, I couldn't down it.

Audrey

I just have to jump in wearing my pediatrician hat. We check iron levels b/c, for unclear reasons, iron-deficiency is associated with problems with brain development, even in the absence of lead toxicity. The low energy side-effect is the only problem with iron-deficiency in adults (that I know of), but iron-deficiency in kids is a little more serious. That being said, the supplements are gross and almost never go in, so I wholeheartedly second all the dietary interventions.

And Bobbi's totally right above--b/c of the risk of infant botulism, please don't give honey (even cooked) to a babe under a year old.

Ally

Those farina sticks sound wonderful and I wish I had had the recipe when Jamie was younger. I think I'll still make them though because he loves cracker-type snacks.

erika

My daughter doesn't like the plain whole grain rice cereal, so we mix a bit of it in with whatever else we're feeding her. Peas, bananas, carrots, you name it. We also add a little bit of cinnamon to the fruit version and a little bit of garlic powder or mild curry powder to the veggie version. Yummy. Oh yeah, and she eats a lot more when we warm things up first.

CathyY

I second Erika... I've added the Earth's Best rice cereal to various foods as a thickening agent and for the added iron. They don't even know it's there! And as a rule of thumb, I serve the high iron foods with fruits (vit C) and never with dairy. Every bit helps.

arb

So timely! Just today I was thinking about this. Our baby is 10 months and we feed her the Earth's Best cereal. My thrifty (a.k.a. cheap) side keeps wondering if I could do it more cheaply by cooking regular grains and fortifying myself. But it sounds like those drops are nasty, so maybe not. But the Farina Stix--sound wonderful! Today I tried cooking her some Rice and Shine, which is a brown rice hot cereal. I cooked it forever but she still found it too grainy. Some months back I tried making my own oatmeal by whirring it through the blender first. It just turned to wallpaper paste when I cooked it. Maybe now that she's 10 months I can try regular quick-cooking oats again. Can anyone else tell me what kinds of grains their babies ate at this age?

erika

Mothering magazine had some recipes for making your own whole grain rice cereal. I've done it on occasion and, if I had more time, would make it more often. (http://www.mothering.com/articles/growing_child/food/kitchen_baby_side2.html)

Kate

In addition to being important to brain development, maintaining an adequate iron level also aids in reducing the negative impact of lead exposure, I believe. In any event, I was quite concerned about this issue and (in addition to getting our apartment tested for lead) I took several of the steps mentioned above. What I did, from the time my son turned six months old: (1) gave my son fortified cereal for breakfast every morning (blended with pureed fruit for palatability); (2) mixed one dose of the iron supplement into one jar of pureed fruit per day (which I offered, e.g., as "dessert" at lunch and dinner); (3) offered pureed poached organic beef, chicken or lamb once or twice a day, usually at lunch and usually blended with a pureed vegetable to increase palatability. What my pediatrician suggested: Just give him a bottle of formula once a day and you won't have to worry. Aaaargh!

Kate

P.S. I have also read about some sort of spinach-kiwi puree as a way to get the iron/Vitamin C one-two punch. Never tried it myself because I was waiting on both foods for allergy-related concerns that I now think were kind of dubious.

Moxie

Kate, how low was your son's iron level?

Also, regular reader Elizabeth may chime in on this herself, but she sneaks frozen spinach into fruit-yogurt smoothies. I have yet to try it, but she swears it adds a little something special without tasting like spinach.

Amy

I forgot to mention this earlier, but my daughter's hematologist recommended animal sources of iron above plant sources, when possible. (Heme vs. Non-heme.) She suggested a combination of spinach mashed into some potato with chicken broth. For whatever reason, the iron in the broth gets taken up into the blood more easily or more completely. I never tried it, to be honest.

This is what our doc said, but I'm not a pediatrician, a nutritionist, or a good cook.

Kate

Oh Moxie, how you underestimate my ability to get hysterical! It wasn't low at all! I was just worried that it could be, in the months between the time that my son hit six months and the time he had the blood test.

Cat, Galloping

Yum! I'm low on iron myself and these sound delicious!

It's also useful to know that, while Vit C helps the absorption of iron, calcium hinders it, so stay away from dairy within 2 hours of consuming the iron.

I also mix oatmeal with plain, whole milk yogurt and fruit but not every day. Guess I should get on that.

Moxie

So you were poaching and pureeing meat every day just as a precaution?!

Does it make me a bad person if that makes me laugh? :)

jenone

I'd love to give my 10 month old Farina Stix and Chex, but as a first time freek-mom, I don't dare introduce wheat too early. I was a bubble child with allergies to everything, so I'm ultra cautious. They are both wheat products, no? Can you make an iron-rich finger food without wheat?

Moxie

I'd think you could do the same polenta-like treatment with any cooked cereal. Just look for one with a lot of iron in it (naturally or fortified) and treat it like you would the cream of wheat.

I'm finding "Crystal Wedding Oats" (huh?) and "Sun Country Iron Fortified Quick Oats."

julia

When I mentioned to my mother that the ped wanted to give Hannah vitamin drops with iron because of her low level, my mom reminisced about how much she loved some liquid iron vitamins that her mom gave her as a kid.

I balked because even though we just get the over-the-counter Poly-vi-sol (which has iron, but other vitamins as well) it smelled like ass.

Banana was fine with the drops when I mixed them in food (any sort would do), but I worried about what to do when she was on only table food. My mom suggested I just try them strait. And sure enough, Hannah LOVES them. She even walks around holding the bottle and asking for more.

Go figure.

My best friend was so opposed to the supplements that she went and bought every toddler food she could find with iron in it. It did the trick and her kiddo passed the next test with flying colors.

Slim

Jenone--
Rice Chex don't have corn or wheat (formerly allergic kid here, too).

CArrie

To minimize staining, we gave the Poly-Vi-Sol 1mL straight from the dropper in the bathtub. A quick rinse and all was fogiven.
Kid has never had his iron checked (now 13 months). I thought it was standard at 9 months, but I guess not. Pediatrician recommended iron becuase I was breastfeeding (which I have since learned is not necessarily necessary) and he was worried about low iron giving low oxygen content in the blood and brain development (or something).

Elizabeth

Moxie, thanks for the shout-out for my Strawberry Yogurt Surprise (the surprise being frozen spinach)! I can't take the credit for the idea, though; the local LLL recommended it. I am taking my DD in for her iron and lead test soon, and I'm nervous her iron will be low since at 13 months she doesn't eat a lot...thanks for these recommendations. I think I might go ahad and order some Floradix.

heather

Yeah, our son loved the iron drops too. We also gave them in the tub because dang do those things stain.

honey

hmmmm, I think I'm gonna look into that Floradix too. And the Farina Stix sound great.

Jenone, there are fortified Barley cereals. My baby loves barley, I don't know if it's the nutty taste, the chewyness or that it's a perfect finger-food but he chows down on the stuff.

I agree with Moxie's theory of how our bodies are naturally designed to work. My approach to foods the second time around was dictated not by the peds recommendations but by what made sense to me, so we did fruits and vegetables, then meat, and then some grains.

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  • My expertise is in helping people be who they want to be, with a specialty in how being a parent fits into everything else. I like people. I like parents. I think you're doing a fantastic job. The nitty-gritty of what you do with your kids is up to you, although I'm happy to post questions here to get data points of how you could try approaching different stages, because, let's face it, this shit is hard. As for me, I have two kids who sleep through the night and can tie their own shoes. I've been a married SAHM, a married freelance WAHM, a divorcing WOHM, a divorced WOHM, and now a WAHM again. I'm not buying the Mommy Wars and I'll come sit next to you no matter how you're feeding your kid. When in doubt, follow the money trail. And don't believe the hype.
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