What gets me laughing out loud about her behavior these days is the faces she sometimes makes when trying a new food that has a strong or distinct taste. (Just think about trying some foods for the very first time – nobody could tell you that this or that tastes fruity or like chicken if you don’t have those tasting/eating experiences to draw on.) Only a young baby doesn’t have the inhibitions that would prevent her from showing how strange (or awful) something tastes.
Keep up to date on Alexandria Leah and Natalie Andrea and how things are changing in the lives of Sarah and Stephen as parents
April 10, 2008
I "eight" well yesterday!
Lexi turned 8 months old yesterday.
She is just so curious about everything, and we’re doing our best to feed her appetite of curiosity about the world – including her literal appetite for food. She’s on quite the varied diet now, having at least tried all sorts of fruits and veggies – paw paw, mangos, garbanzo beans, bananas (her favorite), sweet potatoes, butternut squash, and carrots. And now we’ve introduced her to yogurt and cottage cheese. She doesn’t have any teeth yet, but we’re trying to teach her to chew her food, so we’re giving her tiny chunks of banana, sometimes for her to pick up with her fingers herself, rather than mashing it up and feeding it to her with a spoon. We’re also giving her Cheerios as a sort of dessert after dinner. She enjoys the challenge more of picking them up with her fingers, and we figure that everything she picks up gets put in her mouth anyway, so giving her food to do this with would serve another purpose. Well, she doesn’t quite get the concept of putting food in her mouth and keeping it there yet.
What gets me laughing out loud about her behavior these days is the faces she sometimes makes when trying a new food that has a strong or distinct taste. (Just think about trying some foods for the very first time – nobody could tell you that this or that tastes fruity or like chicken if you don’t have those tasting/eating experiences to draw on.) Only a young baby doesn’t have the inhibitions that would prevent her from showing how strange (or awful) something tastes.
What gets me laughing out loud about her behavior these days is the faces she sometimes makes when trying a new food that has a strong or distinct taste. (Just think about trying some foods for the very first time – nobody could tell you that this or that tastes fruity or like chicken if you don’t have those tasting/eating experiences to draw on.) Only a young baby doesn’t have the inhibitions that would prevent her from showing how strange (or awful) something tastes.
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2 comments:
What about noodles? Peanut butter? The two of them together!
Bill Strehlow
Geneva, Switzerland
aka, Godparent
Hello. This post is likeable, and your blog is very interesting, congratulations :-). I will add in my blogroll =). If possible gives a last there on my blog, it is about the Vinho, I hope you enjoy. The address is http://vinho-brasil.blogspot.com. A hug.
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