We're going to start making our own soon, but I'm torn on what to get to actually make it. We don't have a steamer or a food processor so we're starting from scratch.
I've look at the Beaba, the Baby Bullet, and Baby Brezza. All seem to have pros/cons to them all.
For those of you making your own, what do you find the most cumbersome? Is it the cleaning, the steaming in one contraption and moving to another? What do you wish was easier or wish you had to save you time?
Re: People who make their own baby food - come in!
We've only done avacado and sweet potatoes so far. For the avacado, I just sliced it and mashed it with a fork-- I didn't even need to thin it for her. For the sweet potatoes I actually just microwaved them and then mashed them with a hand held masher. I needed to thin the sweet potatoes, but only did the ones I gave her and not the ones I froze (I'll thin them after I thaw them).
In the future, I'll still hand mash the super soft foods. I'll use a potato ricer and my food processor for everything else. I'm using regular ice cube trays to freeze everything.
As far as steaming, we just use a really cheap metal steaming basket that fits into our cookware. I haven't done much, so I can't really review it for you... but it is all things we already have/use and like.
I have a mini food processor & borrowed a steam basket from my mom. Super easy. I really don't see the need for a special baby food making item. babies are on purees for such a short time period, relatively speaking.
I have spent maybe an hour and a half over a few days total on food and have enough for a month or more (pears, apples, butternut squash & sweet potatoes so far).
One of LO's favorites is bananas and I just heat in microwave for a few seconds and mash. Easy peasy.
Recipes on wholesomebabyfood.com
We have a Kid Co. food processor. It was super cheap compared to the alternatives and its does a great job. Since all of the food you're pureeing is already super soft from baking, boiling, or steaming, you don't need a beast of a machine to mash it up.
As for a steamer, we just use the steamer basket that came with our cookware set for some veggies, we bake sweet potatoes, peaches, and sometimes apples, and boil pears, apples, carrots, and peas. I like baking and boiling more than steaming because baking creates a unique flavor and the boiling creates sweetened water that you can use to thin the food (except for carrots - you shouldn't keep carrot water after boiling/steaming).
I make huge batches every 2-3 weeks and then freeze them in Oxo Tot trays. I wouldn't spend a ton of money on a fancy processor/steamer because if you think about it, he'll only be on purees for a few months and really, you could mash them with a fork if you needed to.
Ginny DX 21-Hydroxylase Deficiency Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
Charlie DX Specific Antibody Deficiency & ASD
A girl after my own heart. If we didn't get the food processor we have as a shower gift, we'd be fork mashing too. lol
Ginny DX 21-Hydroxylase Deficiency Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
Charlie DX Specific Antibody Deficiency & ASD
My little man at 0-1-2
We were given the Baby Bullet as it's pretty sweet. You can mill your own grains in it! Buy organic rice in bulk and serve the whole family!
For steaming, we're totally ghetto and use a collander in a stock pot. Heh.
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This is really interesting to me... so you'd put a piece of food in the colander and then put the colander in a crock pot with... water? How long do you cook it and on what temp? And also can you put a plastic colander in a crock pot?
2 babies in heaven (mc)
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