Super Nutrition for Babies: The Right Way to Feed Your Baby for Optimal Health
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About this ebook
There is a better way to feed your baby. Super Nutrition for Babies gives parents the latest science-verified nutritional recommendations for feeding their child. Based on a program used at one of the largest holistic practices in the country, this book provides information on all aspects of nutrition and feeding, including introducing meat in a child’s diet, healthier alternatives to dairy and soy, starting solid foods, establishing a regular eating schedule, dealing with picky eating, and the best foods for every age and stage so your baby gets the best nutrition to minimize illness and optimize sleep, digestion, and brain development.
“A wonderful guide for getting babies off to the right start, and helping them enjoy the gift of health for life.” —Sally Fallon Morell, President, Weston A. Price Foundation
“A clear, practical, and nontrendy guide for parents on how to best feed babies and toddlers, backed by common sense, ancestral wisdom, and sound science.” —Kaayla T. Daniel, Ph.D., C.C.N., Vice President, Weston A. Price Foundation, and author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food
“Super Nutrition for Babies is something that every expectant and new mother and father should read. This book is a rare treasure!” —Natasha Campbell-McBride, M.D., author of Gut and Psychology Syndrome
“A grand reference book that can be used for many years of a child’s life.” —Nancy Appleton, Ph.D., best-selling author of Healthy Bones and Lick the Sugar Habit
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Super Nutrition for Babies - Katherine Erlich
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The terrible public health experiment of the low-fat, plant-based diet has left our culture in a wreckage of confusion, guilt, and disease. But finally, here is a book for the people who need it most: parents. You only get one chance to grow a child’s body, mind, and spirit, and with our traditional food cultures in shreds, parents have been cut adrift in a sea of conflicting advice. Using clear commonsense and basic nutritional concepts, Katherine Erlich and Kelly Genzlinger have written a book that can be an anchor, and then a safe harbor, for parents and babies everywhere.
—Lierre Keith, author of The Vegetarian Myth: Food, Justice, and Sustainability
A clear, practical, and nontrendy guide for parents on how to best feed babies and toddlers, backed by the trifecta of common sense, ancestral wisdom, and sound science. The recommendations accord with Weston A. Price Foundation principles, and are exactly what’s needed to get our children off to a good start and to empower their health for life.
—Kaayla T. Daniel, Ph.D., C.C.N., Vice President, Weston A. Price Foundation, and author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food
Super Nutrition for Babies by Katherine Erlich and Kelly Genzlinger is something that every expectant and new mother and father should read! It gives the correct information for parents on how to bring up healthy, intelligent and robust children. In a world where parents are constantly bombarded by wrong and harmful information, this book is a rare treasure! I congratulate the authors, who write with authority based on solid clinical and practical experience and their work as a medical doctor and a nutritionist—all supported by thorough research and references. I warmly recommend it.
—Natasha Campbell-McBride, M.D., author of Gut and Psychology Syndrome
Erlich and Genzlinger have compiled a wealth of knowledge and experience into a book that is so basic on one hand and so complete and thorough on the other that readers will understand—without difficulty—the concepts and be able to apply them easily. This book is a grand reference book that can be used for many years of a child’s life.
—Nancy Appleton, Ph.D., author of Lick the Sugar Habit
SUPER
NUTRITION
for babies
THE RIGHT WAY
TO FEED YOUR BABY
FOR OPTIMAL HEALTH
Katherine Erlich, M.D. and
Kelly Genzlinger, C.N.C., C.M.T.A.
Foreword
Super Nutrition for Babies is a much-needed book. Parents are confused about food and often do not have the appropriate knowledge to make the best food choices for their children. Now they have a book that guides them toward making good food decisions.
Conventional medicine makes little mention of the importance of educating parents about how to properly feed their children. Simple dietary changes that emphasize eating nutrient-rich foods would do more than any medicine or vaccine to improve a child’s ability to reach their potential. In fact, educating parents about the optimal way to feed their children should be the first item discussed in the prenatal visit. Super Nutrition for Babies provides the optimal dietary advice that gives children the best chance to reach their true potential.
Health care for children is a disaster. What is health care for children? Conventional medicine spends untold amounts of moneys vaccinating children for numerous illnesses. And yes, many childhood illnesses have declined due to vaccinations. However, epidemic numbers of children are suffering from a host of chronic illnesses such as autism, cancer, obesity, and ADHD.
In the United States, for instance, far more money is spent on health care than any other Western country. Currently, more than 16 percent of the U.S.’s gross domestic product is spent on health care. Unfortunately, spending large sums of money on health care has not provided better health indices. As compared to other Western countries, the U.S. ranks at the bottom of nearly every health indicator. There is more chronic illness, more heart attacks, and generally poorer health when compared to other Western countries. However, it is not just U.S. children that are suffering. All Western countries are seeing dramatic increases of chronic childhood diseases such as autism, ADD/ADHD, and cancer.
Is there an underlying theme behind the declining health of our children? It is not as simple as spending more money. Every country in the world is under strain due to budgetary constraints. In the case of children’s health needs, one inexpensive way to improve the health of children is to feed them nutritious food. This would go a long way to helping the world overcome its health-care crises. This process can be started by following the healthy dietary principles outlined in Super Nutrition for Babies.
I have been practicing holistic medicine for nearly twenty years. I have seen the consequences of feeding children a poor diet full of refined and devitalized foods. Feeding children a devitalized diet leads to devitalized children that will not reach their potential and suffer from myriad health issues.
My experience has clearly shown that the pathway to optimal health for us all is to eat a healthy diet. The pathway to raising a child who can achieve her full potential is to provide the child with a diet that supplies all of the valuable nutrients needed to help optimize their brain function. A healthy diet can also help the child optimize her immune and hormonal systems as well as all the other organs of the body.
Katherine Erlich, M.D., and Kelly Genzlinger, C.N.C., C.M.T.A, have written a must-read book for everyone who has children and for those who are thinking of starting a family. There is no doubt that the younger your child is when you begin optimizing his/her diet, the greater the tools he or she will have to succeed. These tools include vitamins, minerals, enzymes, and fatty acids. The Western diet is lacking in each of these vital items. For nearly twenty years, I have been testing children (and adults) for various nutritional levels. Eating a devitalized diet, full of refined foods, leads to multiple nutritional deficiencies and poor brain function.
We can and should do more for our children. It starts with mothers eating healthier diets. Erlich and Genzlinger discuss this in chapter 7. They point out that eating refined sugar and soy is not a good idea for mothers.
I see the benefits of properly feeding children. These children have less allergies, behavioral problems, chronic illness, depression, fatigue, and digestive problems. Furthermore, children fed a whole foods program as outlined in Super Nutrition for Babies have stronger immune systems.
It makes sense. If you supply the body with the correct nutrients it can do wonderful things. Just as you fuel your car with appropriate gas in order to optimize its function, we need to fuel our children with appropriate food. Children should eat whole food that is nutritious and supplies the body with the appropriate nutrients to maintain optimal function. In addition, educating children about which foods are healthy and which are not will help future generations. Erlich and Genzlinger have provided us with a blueprint for feeding our children the perfect diet. I highly recommend this book for everyone interested in improving their family’s health.
DAVID BROWNSTEIN, M.D., is a board certified family practitioner and medical director of the Center for Holistic Medicine (West Bloomfield, Michigan). He is the author of ten books, including Iodine: Why You Need It, Why You Can’t Live Without It and Overcoming Thyroid Disorders. To learn more, visit www.drbrownstein.com.
The information in this book is for educational purposes only. It is not intended to replace the advice of a physician or medical practitioner. Please see your health care provider before beginning any new health program.
Some of the views expressed in this book are controversial and not widely accepted by the medical community. Some of the information in this book may be considered complimentary, alternative, or integrative medicine and may not be endorsed by governmental or academic institutions. Some of the supplements and recommendations described may not have received approval by the Food and Drug Administration or other regulatory agencies for the purpose for which they are suggested. Readers are encouraged to consult other sources and make independent judgments about the issues discussed.
Contents
Foreword by David Brownstein, M.D.
Introduction
Children’s New Health Concerns
1 Baby Feeding Fundamentals
Nutrition Is Necessary for Health
2 From Fake Flakes to Real Food
Meeting Nutrient Needs with First Foods (6 to 8 Months)
3 Oh-So-Much-Better Than Cereal O’s
Taking the Toxins Out (8 to 10 Months)
4 Reconsider Baby Food Jars and Noodle Stars
Bolstering Immunity with Nutrients and Foods (10 to 12 Months)
5 Shape Up Sweets and Ship Out Sugar
Getting Back to Nature’s Basics (12 to 18 Months)
6 Think Outside the Box of Mac ‘n’ Cheese
Convenience Foods Can Cost You Your Child’s Health (18 to 24 Months)
7 Mom’s Diet Does Matter
Critical Feeding Information for Breast-Fed Babies (0 to 6 Months)
8 Drugstore Formula Doesn’t Cut It
Better Options Than Commercial Alternatives
Recommended Reading and Documentaries
Resources
Sources for Food, Supplements, Ingredients, Books, Equipment, and More!
Afterword
Appendix
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Index
Introduction
Children’s New Health Concerns
We are so excited for you—new parents! There isn’t a more magical time than welcoming your little one into your life and cultivating a family dynamic around your newest member. Time passes quickly in the first two years, each day bringing fresh wonders as his abilities to smile, coo, clutch, crawl, walk, and speak all continue to develop.
We wish you congratulations during this life-changing and memorable chapter in your life. During this time of early parenthood, you too will develop new abilities—those of mother or father, protector, provider, and caregiver. Feeding is but one aspect of how you will care for your baby, and this book will provide you with the best guidance available in terms of when, how, why, and what to feed him.
New Concerns: The 3Cs
All parents wish for their children to have optimal health. But today we have more to fear in terms of pediatric health than parents did just two or three generations ago. In fact, back when your great-grandparents were giving birth to your grandparents, the general public had never heard of autism, celiac disease was incredibly rare, and peanuts were synonymous with baseball games and springtime. Cancer, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, arthritis, and obesity were diseases of the aged. Just a few generations ago, children, by and large, were healthy, strong, and robust.
We see children’s health getting worse with each subsequent generation. Our children today are at grave risk, and parents’ worries are both many and valid. Tragically, the most recent generation of babies is slated to have shorter life spans than their parents. This is unacceptable!
Many of the conditions kids face today are new and thus, are issues for which parents can no longer call upon the wisdom of mothers or grandmothers (who have no experience with stimming
or EpiPens or nebulizers). Parents, perhaps even you, are turning to other parents in support groups and are becoming researchers, analysts, and metabolic specialists
themselves in their quest to find help for their children.
As such, we recognize the following illnesses as being Contemporary Chronic Childhood conditions—the 3Cs
:
Autistic spectrum disorders
Allergies, eczema
Asthma
Attention deficit disorders and learning disabilities
Recurrent pain disorders (headaches. abdominal pain, joint pain)
Emotional, mood, and behavioral disorders (anxiety disorders, depression, bipolar disorder)
Digestive disorders (irritable and inflammatory bowel disorders, gastroesophageal reflux, eosinophilic esophagitis, and gastroenteritis)
Autoimmune conditions (celiac disease, type 1 diabetes, thyroid disorders)
Obesity, metabolic syndrome, and type 2 diabetes
Tooth decay
Cancer
Many of the 3C conditions are directly caused by our modern world, which is full of toxins and nutrient-poor foods (that are themselves a source of toxins). These toxins and deficiencies cripple many areas of the body, causing multiple symptoms and resulting in a veritable puzzle for modern medicine. Often, highly specialized conventional medical models fail to see the whole, for their strict focus on each of the parts. Looking at the whole child through a holistic perspective is often necessary to piece all the symptoms together when it comes to the 3Cs.
Though conventional medicine claims most of the 3C conditions are incurable, this isn’t the last word. The good news is that most children with 3C conditions can improve. But more important, by following a program of Super Nutrition—the program you’re holding in your hands—these problems can be prevented and often cured.
It boils down to this: Poor health comes from poor foods. Undernourished children are more vulnerable to infection, more susceptible to toxins and cancer, and more likely to develop learning, attention, and behavioral problems.
Since you’re reading this book, we know that you want more for your child than what today’s statistics promise. Instead of worrying about the bad and just hoping for good, you are taking control of your child’s health destiny. Food is one of the most powerful tools you have to protect, preserve, and ensure your baby’s health and well-being. In the coming chapters, we’ll introduce the concept of Super Nutrition and explain how providing foods that are rich in critical nutrients, as well as reducing toxins, will enable your baby’s body to function optimally. We’ll focus on what you can proactively do to create a fundamental base of good health for your baby and significantly increase the odds of your baby living a long, happy, and healthy life.
A Better Way
When researchers and anthropologists study nonindustrialized cultures, they find that they are often free of heart disease, cancer, infertility, emotional and behavioral disturbances, birth defects, diabetes, autism, life-threatening allergies, and other afflictions that are commonly accepted in our culture today. Even in just the last generation, we have seen a marked statistical increase in these conditions that experts remark are not attributable to better testing, awareness, or diagnosis. In fact, the 3Cs were so rare in preindustrialized cultures that these relatively new conditions are often called Diseases of Civilization.
This is significant. Research corroborates that when we modernize and industrialize
our foods (and our environment), we increasingly get Diseases of Civilization with each generation. This is very important when you consider what to feed your baby because food is the most significant environmental
component in his life. Diet can make a positive impact on your baby’s health and development—or be a major detriment to his health.
Though many attest that life was much shorter back then,
it is actually true that many primitive cultures, such as the Russian Georgians, Pakistani Hunza, and Ecuadorian Vilcabamba peoples, heralded healthy octo-, nono-, and even centenarians. It was once believed that cancer and diabetes developed only because modern man
was living longer. We’ve since learned, however, that these are not just adult-onset
diseases, but rather are diseases of industrialization—as now even our children increasingly suffer with them.
Many preindustrialized cultures held certain indigenous foods sacred; science proves these to be particularly nutritious foods. We’ll show you which foods these are, and how to prepare them, in the chapters to come. Many of our grandparents and great-grandparents also recognized the power of food, feeding their families organ meats and spooning out cod liver oil. Somehow this knowledge has slowly faded away, while processed foods have taken center stage.
Even as recently as when our parents were children, they had far fewer toxic exposures. They did not have genetically modified foods or high fructose corn syrup; they had fewer pesticides and far fewer antibiotics given to their food animals (and themselves); they were given significantly fewer vaccines, had no bromine in their bread, less radiation in their skies, fewer chemicals on their skin, no cell phones or laptops, and far more sun exposure and daily exercise. Their diets were fresher, more local, more pure, less processed, and substantially more nutritious.
Traditional wisdom, passed down through countless generations, directed parents to feed their babies the most nutrient-rich foods available, which included the meat, fat, and organs from poultry (including ducks and geese), red meat (including lamb and wild game), and fish and shellfish. Eggs, milk, raw dairy, bone broths, and even insects were also commonly found in preindustrialized diets. These foods were accompanied by select, seasonal fruits, veggies, nuts, seeds, and occasionally specially prepared grains and beans.
We’ve placed advertisements, such as this one from 1936, throughout the book illustrating what babies were fed in the 1930s, ’40s, and ’50s, as well as what appealed to parents who selected and judged foods based on what their mothers had fed them. (The mid-last century heralded the introduction of the first commercial baby foods—before then, babies were only fed homemade foods). We haven’t included these ads as a way to recommend canned and jarred baby foods, but instead we intend to demonstrate that, indeed, our recommendations are throwbacks to earlier generations’ methods of feeding babies and toddlers. These were decades in which deathly allergies, asthma, autism, attention problems, depression, diabetes, and even obesity were extremely rare in children. We intend for these ads to be reminders of the nutritional guidance of our great-grandparents and ancestors and a way of feeding that we now know was more protective than today’s dietary regimen. As this ad suggests, your baby’s "health should be—must be—protected at any cost! It states:
‘Bargains’ in food should not be for him . . . and we attest: nor should compromised nutrition—in the name of convenience. This ad appealed to the wisdom of generations ago, that babies should be fed foods of sufficient
purity and with
garden freshness,
natural color, and
wholesome goodness, which comes from
higher vitamin content."
It is time to feed our babies differently than our current standard. Instead of relying on our newfangled Franken-foods
of industrialization, we recommend going back to the more natural foods of preindustrialized peoples that did a far better job of keeping the children of our ancestors healthy.
Cutting Edge, but Traditionally Sound
Can food really protect your child? Hippocrates said, Let food be thy medicine, and let thy medicine be food.
Unfortunately, this ancient wisdom has been lost in the name of food companies’ media storms, advertising blitzes, and continual tsunami of consumer data. Let’s admit it: We’ve been relying on marketers to tell us what is healthy, to teach us how to feed our kids, and even to provide doctors with their nutritional education
(which is lacking in conventional medical schools). But the truth is, those marketers and their advertisements aren’t motivated to make healthy kids—they’re driven to sell products and make profit.
To ensure the proper health of our children, we must resist being seduced by convenience-based processed foods. Too often parents focus on making sure their children get enough calories, rather than focusing on the nutrients their kids most need. And too often we say we’re too busy for anything but fast food, or packaged food, or junk
food. Yet, it is whole food that heals, real food that protects, and traditional food that nourishes.
We realize that what we present here is unconventional and . . . well, different. Yet a decade of working with patients and finding considerable rates of success in improving health and quality of life for babies and young children—and ameliorating root-cause issues relating to the 3Cs—has incited us to spread the word. What we offer—the fundamentals of Super Nutrition feeding for babies—works differently than normal
baby feeding. It serves to safeguard health and normal development, as well as to restore quality of life in children with modern, chronic cognitive, emotional, and physical illnesses.
In addition to our own practical, personal, and professional application of Super Nutrition, we have extensively researched and studied the findings of world-renowned experts, who have also found remarkable success through such feeding principles. Though our approach to feeding babies is far from mainstream, it is both cutting-edge and traditionally sound. Super Nutrition is a way of feeding your child that gives the best nutrition for optimal development, cognitively and physically, and is protective against illnesses and 3C conditions. Do this for your child and you’ll be optimizing his/her health now and years from now.
Implementing and practicing Super Nutrition is not easy—and we’re saying this right from the get-go, just so there’s no confusion. If you want easy, stick with the Standard American Diet—its entire premise is convenience. If, however, you want optimal health for your baby, then you’ll have to give up some conveniences. Our program is comprised of special foods and purposeful ways of preparing and making meals; therefore, special attention and time is required. We provide some tricks and guidance to make things easier, though, and the more you do it, the easier it will become.
And there’s a bonus: Most of the parents we’ve worked with who start spending more time practicing Super Nutrition find a deep sense of satisfaction and fulfillment that they don’t find anywhere else—it is one of knowing that they are truly nourishing their children, a gift no one else can give.
While you might be excited to get going
with Super Nutrition and want to flip to the age-appropriate chapter for your child, we hope you’ll read this book in full. In the first chapter, we lay the groundwork for our feeding program—the what, the how, and even more important, the why. We’ll show you why our way is a better way of feeding your baby—as well as explain how current mainstream feeding trends aren’t all they’re cracked up to be. We’ll share with you our Super Nutrition food categories and show you how easy it is to make nutritionally sound selections for your child if you keep these categories in mind. We’ll also discuss our four pillars of Super Nutrition—improving digestion, eliminating toxins, safeguarding immunity, and eating nutrient-worthy, whole foods—and what they can mean for your baby’s health. In chapters 2 through 6, we’ll break them out and examine each pillar in more detail.
The chapters have been organized to follow the growth, age, and stages of development of your child, beginning with his first introduction to food and coinciding with our program’s foundational pillars. Though the recipes that accompany each chapter are specific for the age of your child at that time, the nutritional benefits cannot be outgrown. Thus, you can use the recipes and information gained in each chapter for your entire family.
If you’re reading this book before your bundle of joy has even arrived, we salute you! You cannot begin protective nutrition early enough. Super Nutrition for your baby begins with you—beginning with what you feed
your baby in utero to what you eat while producing milk to feed your baby. (Our nursing dietary guidelines in chapter 7 are also ideal for eating during pregnancy.) But as we also recognize that some parents will not or cannot nurse, we’ve included a special chapter, chapter 8, on making your own formula that closely mimics the nutrition found in mom’s milk and is so much more protective and nourishing than what you’d find in a canister.
Throughout each of the chapters we’ve added tips, tricks, and ideas to help ease you into implementing our program—look for the boxes called Mom to Mom.
Finally, we’ve included a thorough resources section that includes essential where-to-buy information on many of the ingredients we recommend as well as countless books and websites to turn to for further information.
Super Nutrition for Babies will help you reap the benefits that traditional foods can provide. It will show you how to make better food choices for your baby and how to prepare those foods so that they can be most nourishing. Your baby deserves nothing but the best!