thread: So, what's the deal with dairy?

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  1. #1
    Registered User

    Mar 2007
    6,900

    So, what's the deal with dairy?

    I've read no cows milk til over 12 months but then you can give them yoghurt and cheese before this??
    Is that right??
    When can DD have yoghurt then? Should we wait a bit?

  2. #2
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    Feb 2006
    melbourne
    11,462

    you can start dairy at 6 months! just small amounds, id get yogurt such as jalna and not the babies yogurts as there full of sugar

  3. #3

    Oct 2005
    A Nestle Free Zone... What about YOU?
    5,374

    I would be very very careful with introducing dairy that early... My children's father has asthma and his family have a long history of asthma, eczema & other allergies. There is a very strong connection between the early introduction of dairy and allergies...

    Yoghurt is a little different in structure to cheese, milk etc so therefore is safer to introduce earlier.

    Remember that baby humans are best with human milk and baby cows with cows milk. So it's harder work on their little bodies to digest something that comes from a different source...

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    Victoria
    7,260

    I LOVE Jalna!! Milk and fruit puree and cultures - REAL yoghurt! lol

    Charlotte has had yoghurt since she started solids...for a while it was almost all she would eat lol
    Cows milk contains proteins that are hard for young guts to digest, giving them tummy aches etc so little is a good thing.
    Goats milk works really well though, tastes better too
    You can also now get the a2 milk which has some of the proteins taken out...Lactose free milk Zymil we found really good for Charlotte when she started drinking it watered down at about 10 months or so.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Mar 2007
    6,900

    Oh well we have the Jalna yoghurt here at least!

  6. #6
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    Feb 2006
    melbourne
    11,462

    in the ABA solids booklet they say that small amounts can be introduced at 6 months as it is now thought that small amounts given from 6 months can help reduce allergies rather than causing them

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Feb 2009
    Central Coast NSW
    592

    That's interesting AJP - I don't have the ABA book but my encyclopaedia on infant nutrition says similar - I'm hoping it's the case, DH was fully BF so no dairy till older but a lot of the later research into allergies by immunologists has been suggesting what you mention - but researchers and officials seem to change their mind every decade or so anyway just to confuse all of us. As a side point if kids or adults are just lactose intolerant as opposed to a full-on allergy than cheese is fine too (hard cheese contains almost no lactose interestingly) and yoghurt's good bacteria help to digest the lactose already. Now I'm hungry for cheese and yoghurt - ah to be a baby and not have to diet - I swear I am jealous of DD's food sometimes Congrats Heaven on 6 months breastfeeding and reaching solids age too, I'll get you in this thread instead (lazy I know)

  8. #8
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    Feb 2006
    melbourne
    11,462

    i have to admit sarah i personally wouldnt give dairy at 6 months, will probably wait til closer to 10 months for yogurt etc.. it really is personal choice! its very confusing though!

  9. #9
    Registered User

    Feb 2009
    Central Coast NSW
    592

    I think when it says no cows milk till over 12 months it just means as their main milk source (so people don't start giving their kids cows milk instead of BB or Formula as their 'milk'), you can still use it in small amounts in cooking solids or in their cereal if you want but look out for a intolerance as obviously dairy is a common one. But it's a pretty obvious one too so you'll know from their poo if it's a problem. I was on the lookout cause DH was sesitive as a kid but DD is fine.

    I've given my baby dairy since 6 months - yoghurt, butter, cheese & little bit milk if no formula left in the bottle for her porridge. We use Jalna here too - it's DD's favourite food - if I can't get her o eat anything else there's always yoghurt. The Jalna has no thickeners, gelatine, or cane sugar like the others. (Just don't accidentally buy the low fat one like I did once - it's so gross, guess the low fat ones need all the artificial stuff to make them taste good )

  10. #10

    Oct 2005
    A Nestle Free Zone... What about YOU?
    5,374

    No cows milk is no cows milk - but of course its up to individuals. Intolerance doesn't always show up in their poo I am afraid. Also it's not necessarily what it does immediately. Have a little google of children/babies and processed milk versus raw milk and it explains it really well.

    Yoghurt is a different kettle of fish to cheese and milk &I too only choose brands that have no [processed sugar such as Jalna..

  11. #11
    Registered User

    Feb 2007
    In the jungle.
    4,809

    No cows milk is no cows milk - but of course its up to individuals. Intolerance doesn't always show up in their poo I am afraid.
    :yeahthat: No it does not, took a blood test here to find out. i wont be giving DD2 cows milk for a long time, but we have asthma and food intolerances in the family.