Monthly Archives: November 2009

Banana Date Muffins

This was supposed to be for breakfast today, but due to a couple of beginning of the month mix-ups (we change chores the first of the month), the person scheduled for dinner preparation made breakfast instead and made lemon ricotta muffins instead because she didn’t know where the bananas were.  So I unfortunately can’t share with you  how these turned out, but the muffins she made were great! 🙂

Though honey and sucanat are high quality sweeteners, any sweeteners are best used in moderation.  Though we already use sweeteners in small amounts, I’m experimenting with making baked goods with no honey or sucanat, and am trying out using blended dates as the sweetener.  (I bought fifteen pounds during my last shopping trip so that I have enough to experiment with. :))  I’m also trying to find alternate flours to bake with to minimize the gluten for my ds16.   If you like the taste of this, you can adapt other muffin recipes using this basic concept.

Banana Date Muffins (gluten free)

  • 3 eggs
  • 1/4 c. coconut oil
  • 2 medium bananas
  • 3 dates
  • 1/4 c. coconut flour (I was planning to whiz some unsweetened shredded coconut in the blender to use)
  • 1/4 t. salt
  • 1/2 t. baking soda
  • 1/2 c. chopped walnuts

Blend the first four ingredients.  Then mix the three dry  ingredients.   Mix the blended mixture with the dry ingredients until batter is smooth.  Fold in the chopped walnuts.  Pour into greased or lined muffin tins.  Bake at 350 degrees for 20 – 25 minutes.

Avivah

Homemade Chocolate Pudding

Some of you are probably wondering after reading my menu, ‘If you care about nutrition, why are you serving your kids chocolate pudding for breakfast?  It doesn’t sound too healthy to me.’

People seem to have an idea that eating healthfully means eating tasteless and unappetizing foods that have no visual or taste appeal.  Part of the fun of eating based on a traditional foods model is that you can make so many delicious foods that we tend to think of as junky and bad for you, simply by substituting high quality ingredients and using proper preparation techniques.

I find it easy to adapt recipes and transform them into something good for you.  Here’s my healthy version of homemade chocolate pudding that we made for breakfast today:

Homemade Chocolate Pudding

  • 1/4 – 1/2  c. sucanat
  • 1/4 c. arrowroot flour
  • 1/2 c. cocoa
  • 3 c. milk (I used organic non homogenized for this – didn’t want to use my raw milk since it would be cooked in the process)
  • 3 medium eggs
  • 1 T. butter

Combine the sucanat and arrowroot flour in a pan.  Stir in the milk (a whisk is very handy for this but mine was missing and I made do with a fork).  Cook over a medium heat until the mixtured is thickened and bubbly, stirring constantly to keep prevent lumps.

In a small bowl, beat eggs and gradually stir in a cup of the cooked mixture while whisking it. (Doing this keeps it from curdling or cooking into small chunks when mixed into the hot pudding mixture.)   Then return this egg mixture to the larger pot of pudding, continuously stirring. Cook until nearly bubbling, but not boiling.  Reduce the heat to low and stir a couple more minutes.

Remove from heat.  Stir in butter.  If you want to eat it warm, let it cool about five minutes and serve.  Also delicious after being refrigerated and served cold.

Notice that this includes milk, eggs, and butter – all typical breakfast foods.  It’s just mixed up in a different way than you associate with breakfast foods.  If you want to make this vanilla instead, leave out the cocoa and use 1/3 a cup of arrowroot instead of 1/4 c.  Also add in 2 t. of vanilla at the very end when you mix in the vanilla.

Next time I think I’ll make vanilla pudding instead – it will be neater to serve.  🙂

Avivah

Introducing solids and making baby food

>>When you start your baby on solids, would you mind to blog about your approach and how you introduce different foods?<<

This was an incredibly timely request, coming less than half a day after giving my baby solids for the first time!

Generally, my babies start eating solids between 6 and 8 months.  My oldest started at eight months because I had the idea then that the longer you waited, the better.  That wasn’t the case with him; I should have started him sooner but didn’t recognize that and his weight dropped before I realized he needed more food.  My last baby (now two years old) also didn’t really start eating solids until eight months.  In his case, he wasn’t interested, despite being given opportunities periodically from six months and on.   All the others started at six months, at which point they were all showing significant interest.  Last but not least is the current baby, who is starting younger than everyone else at 5 months and one week – and he is sooo ready!  (I think that being born three weeks past his due date is relevant here, since if he was born ‘on time’ he would be exactly six months now.)

A few days ago, my dd was eating something and commenting on how the baby kept trying to grab her food and stick it in his mouth.  (He’s been doing this for several weeks.)  So she asked if she could try giving him something to eat, and after looking in the fridge, asked if she could give him yogurt.  Generally I don’t give dairy from the start, but after my initial hesitation, told her to go ahead since it was homemade yogurt from organic/hormone free milk.  He loved it!  If we had any doubt about if he was too young or not, those doubts were gone within about two minutes.  He kept eating, and eating, and eating – until he had eaten two cups of full fat yogurt.

This is the only time I’ve ever started with dairy.  Generally I start with banana mashed very well, followed soon afterwards by baked (and mashed) yam that has coconut oil mixed into it.  I look at solids as supplemental to nursing, not as the source of their main nutrition.  Avocados and other fruits and vegetables soon follow, all cooked if necessary and then mashed well.  Gradually I mash the food less finely, to give the baby  exposure to food of different textures.  By the time they are a year, they are eating almost everything we eat, albeit in a somewhat mashed form.  I also add in milk, butter, gravy, and stock to their foods, depending what they’re eating.

After a few months, I add in foods like oatmeal.  I don’t feel that cereal grains are ideal foods for a young baby, and when I do serve them, try to be sure they’re properly prepared to maximize absorption of vitamins and to minimize the negatives.  One grain that I very much try to delay is wheat.  Wheat gluten is a very difficult to digest grain, and if I could, I’d keep it away from my babies until they are two years old.  But it’s not so easy when others in the house eat wheat based foods, since they end up finding something and stuffing it into their mouths, or seeing everyone else having some and naturally also wanting some.   This time around I’m planning to  be more proactive and bake biscuits/crackers with alternative flours, keeping them in the freezer so I can pull out a similar looking non-wheat option when he sees his siblings eating something that he wants.  (I have a few months until this will be necessary.)

For a very short time when my oldest started solids, I gave him baby cereal mixed with formula.  I know, I know, the absolute ignorance of youth can be frightening.  🙂  That’s what the nurse at the well baby clinic recommended (additionally, she also told me to give him chocolate to fatten him up – which was probably somewhat better than the recommendation a friend of mine was given, to feed her baby oil) and that’s what I saw other mothers doing so I thought it was the right thing to do. After less than a month, my husband told me he didn’t like it – “I feel like we’re feeding him plastic”, so that was the last of store bought food for our babies.  From there we switched to what I described above.

Aside from that very short foray into factory created baby food, I haven’t bought processed baby foods for any of our nine children.  Besides my skepticism about the nutritional value, it’s incredibly expensive.  How much does a banana cost – thirty cents?  That’s a lot cheaper than a jar of baby food that holds a similar amount of food, and with a banana there’s a lot less likelihood of contamination.

I think parents have been sold a bill of goods when it comes to marketing of baby foods – there’s hardly anything easier than making your own baby food.  You don’t need a scientific formula.  You don’t need a lot of time.  You don’t have to do anything extra to ‘make’ baby food.  You can buy a food mill to grind food up or a blender to blend it, but a fork works just fine.  Since I start with soft and easily mashed foods, there’s no difficulty in manually mashing it immediately prior to serving it.  (The main exception that I’ve had is brown rice – I don’t generally add this in until the baby is very comfortable with texture unless I blend it, since it’s very hard to mash it well with a fork.)

Some parents like to make a big amount, blend it, and freeze it in ice cube trays for small portions.  I’ve never done that, but can see how it would be a good idea.  This would be especially convenient when they get to the point they are eating something like chicken with carrots and rice blended in, since you’re not going to make a recipe of only one cup.

I try to give vegetables like carrots and zucchini fairly soon after they start eating, within a month or so, since it’s easy for babies to get used to the sweetness of fruits and after a period of time, often will turn down anything not sweet since it isn’t a familiar taste.  I’m very fortunate that none of my kids have ever been picky eaters, and part of that probably stems from when they are very little, when they eat a variety of  foods.  I still remember when we had a couple of teenage boys for Shabbos/Sabbath lunch, watching in awe as my then 1 year old infant daughter gobbled down three servings of cholent – “Whoa, your baby is awesome! She can eat more cholent than me!”  Maybe cholent isn’t typical baby food, but all of our babies have enjoyed it!

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

This week it felt quiet at our Shabbos table  – dd14 went to NY for the weekend for her camp bunk reunion, and then ds10 was our for lunch, so there were only seven children home for the meal.   And since the baby was sleeping in the beginning, it was only six at the table at a time, so it really felt empty, even with our spontaneously invited guests (one for dinner and one for lunch). But it was still a beautiful Shabbos- the weather was just beautiful.  When looking out the window, it looked like a stark winter day, but as soon as I stepped out, I felt the beautiful warm autumn air and didn’t want to go back inside!

Shabbos – dinner – challah, chicken, cauliflower popcorn, mashed potatoes, sauteed broccoli with red pepper and onion, green bean salad, fruit; lunch – beef ch0lent (stew), chicken, potato knishes, mini pumkin puddings, sweet and sour carrots, cranberry orange sauce, coleslaw, pickled green tomatoes, fresh salad, fruit, nuts, dried fruit

Sunday – breakfast – chocolate pudding; lunch – noodles with sauce, bean stew; dinner – cholent, kishke, roasted vegetable, salad

Monday – b – banana date muffins; l – cottage cheese pancakes; d – beefy beans and rice

Tuesday- b – yogurt, mango; d – carrot and spinach soup, baked potatoes

Wednesday – b – sourdough pancakes; d – millet cheese cakes

Thursday – b – southern biscuits, eggs; d – honey baked lentils, cornbread

Friday – b – creamy oatmeal

Breakfasts are supplemented by milk and fruit, lunches and dinners with vegetables.  If lunch isn’t listed, it’s because it will be planned leftovers of the dish planned for the dinner before (ie purposely making a larger amount so there will be enough for two meals).

The sourdough starter I finally started at the end of last week is looking good and should be ready to use for the sourdough pancakes by the end of the week.  The sauerkraut fermenting on the counter should be ready in another week- it looks good but the cabbage still has some crunch left to it and it’s best when the cabbage is nice and soft.  I’ll start some beans and lentils soaking today so they’ll be sprouted for later in the week.  I also want to make another batch of yogurt today – we have been going through loads of it since I started making it myself; the kids really like it!

Avivah