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Nanny WisdomsHere are a few of our Nanny Wisdoms - they are some of the tips and tricks we have picked up over the years. |
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Savory Foods First
My "savory-foods-first" rule ensures that a baby will like more than sweet foods; she’ll like a variety of foods, and her diet will be well balanced. - Excerpt from Nanny Wisdom - Chapter Two, Babies - the First Year of Life - Start As you Mean to Go on. Posted by Hamish Robertson on July 22, 2005. Send to a friend. |
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The Nannies’ Terrific Timer
I would set the timer for ten minutes, place it near where Scott was playing, and tell him that when the bell rang, it would be time to finish playing and come to the table for dinner. Scott was clearly intrigued; even on that first night, I could sense him listening for the timer to go off. After a few days with the timer, Scott no longer refused to come to the table. Instead, he would jump up when it went off, because he understood clearly that the buzzer meant it was time to come to the table for dinner. - Excerpt from Nanny Wisdom - Chapter Five, Secrets from the Nannies Kitchen – Giving Your Children a Healthy, Balanced Diet. Posted by Hamish Robertson on June 26, 2005. Send to a friend. |
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After weaning dozens of babies, I discovered that they often prefer sweet fruit purees to vegetable purees. This seems especially true for breast-fed babies, because breast milk is naturally sweet. When I was a novice nanny weaning a baby girl for the first time, I offered her mostly fresh fruit purees, as that was what she obviously preferred. I soon realized she wasn’t eating a wide variety of foods and I wished that I had introduced her to foods with a sharper taste first. Since then, all the babies I have weaned have begun their diets with foods like green beans, broccoli, zucchini, turnips, and potatoes. I only add the sweeter vegetables like squash and carrots and then the fruit purees to the diet once the baby has accepted the savory foods and developed a taste for them.
Two-year-old Scott would become so wrapped up playing with his Thomas the Tank Engine that he wouldn’t want to come to the table for dinner. Even when I gave him ten minutes’ notice, there were still cries of protest. I knew that the only solution to this nightly struggle was my Terrific Timer—which was nothing more than a simple kitchen timer for helping kids having a hard time adjusting to everyday transitions. Here’s how it worked with Scott:

