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	<title>Comments on: Top 100 Baby Purees: 100 Quick and Easy Meals for a Healthy and Happy Baby</title>
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	<link>http://babyfoodgrinder.net/making-baby-food/top-100-baby-purees-100-quick-and-easy-meals-for-a-healthy-and-happy-baby/61/</link>
	<description>Information and Reviews of Baby Food Grinders</description>
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		<title>By: Othello</title>
		<link>http://babyfoodgrinder.net/making-baby-food/top-100-baby-purees-100-quick-and-easy-meals-for-a-healthy-and-happy-baby/61/comment-page-1/#comment-258</link>
		<dc:creator>Othello</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Oct 2009 02:00:34 +0000</pubDate>
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I bought this book looking for homemade baby food recipes and got so much more. Besides having lots of tasty recipes for each stage of your baby&#039;s development it provides valuable nutritional iformation. Each recipe is easy to follow and easy to make. The best part is that they actually taste good! I usually spend 3-4 hours over 2 days to make enough baby food to last a month. A tip, pick a few recipes that use similar ingredients and as Rachel Ray says, &quot;Use it twice, chop it once.&quot;&#13;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;To make my life easier most recipes are suitable to freeze. I freeze them in 1 ounce ice cube trays (mostly the fruit purees to add to yogurt, cottage cheese, or baby cereal) and in 4 ounce portions (for the more complete meals). Some of my baby&#039;s favorites are the Lovely Lentils, Apple-Mango Puree (mixed with plain yogurt), and the Sweet Potato with Spinach and Peas. I love this book and I love knowing my baby is eating healthy, tasty food that I&#039;ve prepared.
      </description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I bought this book looking for homemade baby food recipes and got so much more. Besides having lots of tasty recipes for each stage of your baby&#8217;s development it provides valuable nutritional iformation. Each recipe is easy to follow and easy to make. The best part is that they actually taste good! I usually spend 3-4 hours over 2 days to make enough baby food to last a month. A tip, pick a few recipes that use similar ingredients and as Rachel Ray says, &#8220;Use it twice, chop it once.&#8221;&#13;</p>
<p>To make my life easier most recipes are suitable to freeze. I freeze them in 1 ounce ice cube trays (mostly the fruit purees to add to yogurt, cottage cheese, or baby cereal) and in 4 ounce portions (for the more complete meals). Some of my baby&#8217;s favorites are the Lovely Lentils, Apple-Mango Puree (mixed with plain yogurt), and the Sweet Potato with Spinach and Peas. I love this book and I love knowing my baby is eating healthy, tasty food that I&#8217;ve prepared.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Rafi</title>
		<link>http://babyfoodgrinder.net/making-baby-food/top-100-baby-purees-100-quick-and-easy-meals-for-a-healthy-and-happy-baby/61/comment-page-1/#comment-257</link>
		<dc:creator>Rafi</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Oct 2009 01:55:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://babyfoodgrinder.net/making-baby-food/top-100-baby-purees-100-quick-and-easy-meals-for-a-healthy-and-happy-baby/61/#comment-257</guid>
		<description>&lt;/div&gt;

My daughter is turning eight months this week. She is not eating textured foods yet or finger foods, but she is getting bored with one-ingredient foods and bland food like just sweet potatoes by themselves, so I&#039;m starting to make her some varied purees with different ingredients and spices. Hence, why I ordered this book!&#13;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;What I was expecting to find was exactly what the title said...100 puree recipes. Not a book divided into ages with age-appropriate recipes. The first section tells you how to steam and puree vegetables and fruits. Then moves on to 6 month old foods, and then 7-9 month foods and then 9-12 month recipes which aren&#039;t even purees. They look more like recipes I would make for my husband and I, not that it&#039;s a bad thing at all, because we want her eating what we&#039;re eating in a few months!&#13;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;I&#039;m not returning the book, because some of the recipes look awesome and I can&#039;t wait to try them, but it&#039;s not what I was looking for at all when I ordered it. It really should be retitled to something other than Top 100 Baby Purees when that&#039;s not really what it is.&#13;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;But the BEST part of this book that is so different than other books is that it has some great puree recipes for chicken and beef and fish, and I haven&#039;t been able to find that anywhere else. And the recipes call for onion and garlic, which are two ingredients that my husband cook a lot with, so it&#039;s going to be a good cookbook for us. So, three stars for the quality of the book and the ease of the recipes which I can tell already by reading them since I&#039;m an experienced cook, but a two star deduction for the bad title.
      </description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My daughter is turning eight months this week. She is not eating textured foods yet or finger foods, but she is getting bored with one-ingredient foods and bland food like just sweet potatoes by themselves, so I&#8217;m starting to make her some varied purees with different ingredients and spices. Hence, why I ordered this book!&#13;</p>
<p>What I was expecting to find was exactly what the title said&#8230;100 puree recipes. Not a book divided into ages with age-appropriate recipes. The first section tells you how to steam and puree vegetables and fruits. Then moves on to 6 month old foods, and then 7-9 month foods and then 9-12 month recipes which aren&#8217;t even purees. They look more like recipes I would make for my husband and I, not that it&#8217;s a bad thing at all, because we want her eating what we&#8217;re eating in a few months!&#13;</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not returning the book, because some of the recipes look awesome and I can&#8217;t wait to try them, but it&#8217;s not what I was looking for at all when I ordered it. It really should be retitled to something other than Top 100 Baby Purees when that&#8217;s not really what it is.&#13;</p>
<p>But the BEST part of this book that is so different than other books is that it has some great puree recipes for chicken and beef and fish, and I haven&#8217;t been able to find that anywhere else. And the recipes call for onion and garlic, which are two ingredients that my husband cook a lot with, so it&#8217;s going to be a good cookbook for us. So, three stars for the quality of the book and the ease of the recipes which I can tell already by reading them since I&#8217;m an experienced cook, but a two star deduction for the bad title.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Myeisha</title>
		<link>http://babyfoodgrinder.net/making-baby-food/top-100-baby-purees-100-quick-and-easy-meals-for-a-healthy-and-happy-baby/61/comment-page-1/#comment-256</link>
		<dc:creator>Myeisha</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Oct 2009 00:36:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://babyfoodgrinder.net/making-baby-food/top-100-baby-purees-100-quick-and-easy-meals-for-a-healthy-and-happy-baby/61/#comment-256</guid>
		<description>&lt;/div&gt;

I am so glad I bought this book; it agrees with my philosophy about shaping children&#039;s palates early, using whole foods, and organic eating in general. The recipes are easy and delicious, and give you ideas for all the way into toddlerhood. I love the inclusion of recipes using meat, fish, and chicken. My daughter has loved everything I have made from this book so far; my husband and I have even eaten a few- with salt and seasoning added for adult taste- and enjoyed them.&#13;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;I do, however, agree with Lynn W.- USE WISDOM with certain recipes, since the author does not seem to follow the AAP&#039;s recommendations about when to introduce certain foods, and seems to lack a current understanding about food allergies in children. There are lots of recipes with cow&#039;s milk, tomatoes, and citrus, for example, for very young babies. &#13;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Otherwise, I highly recommend this book as an excellent resource. 
      </description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am so glad I bought this book; it agrees with my philosophy about shaping children&#8217;s palates early, using whole foods, and organic eating in general. The recipes are easy and delicious, and give you ideas for all the way into toddlerhood. I love the inclusion of recipes using meat, fish, and chicken. My daughter has loved everything I have made from this book so far; my husband and I have even eaten a few- with salt and seasoning added for adult taste- and enjoyed them.&#13;</p>
<p>I do, however, agree with Lynn W.- USE WISDOM with certain recipes, since the author does not seem to follow the AAP&#8217;s recommendations about when to introduce certain foods, and seems to lack a current understanding about food allergies in children. There are lots of recipes with cow&#8217;s milk, tomatoes, and citrus, for example, for very young babies. &#13;</p>
<p>Otherwise, I highly recommend this book as an excellent resource.</p>
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