Wednesday, 27 July 2016

Homemade Baby Food Isn't Necessarily Healthier Than Store-Bought !

Homemade baby food worse than bought


View all reports related to Baby Food Industry at: : https://goo.gl/lWYuIz

Preparing a nutritious homemade meal for your baby or toddler may seem like the best way to give them a healthy start in life. But home cooking tends to contain far more fat, calories and salt than pre- packaged children's foods sold in the shops, researchers have found.

Experts at Aberdeen and Warwick universities found that while home-cooked meals cost half the price of those in supermarkets, they contain almost treble the levels of saturated fat and treble the salt.

The research team also found ready meals aimed at babies, toddlers and under-fives contained a greater variety of vegetables.

Homemade meals were found to be more nutritious overall than meals from leading brands and relied less heavily on beef and other red meat. But the researchers said the fat levels were of concern.

Experts are increasingly interested in the food that babies are fed in their first years in life, warning that these early meals inform the tastes and habits that will last a lifetime.

The researchers, whose work is published in the journal BMJ Archives of Disease in Childhood, analysed the nutrient content, price and food group variety of 278 ready-made meals sold in Asda, Tesco, Morrisons, Sainsbury's, Aldi, Lidl, Boots and Superdrug.

They compared these to 408 home-cooked meals, made using recipes from 55 cookbooks designed for the diets of babies and toddlers.

The team found that home-cooked recipes contained much higher levels of salt, double the protein, twice the levels of all fats and almost treble the saturated fat.

They also provided 26 per cent more calories than ready meals, on average, with half exceeding the calorie requirements for a single meal.

1 comment:

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