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🥺🍲 Preferring Milk Over Solids After 8 Months

🥺🍲 Preferring Milk Over Solids After 8 Months

Understanding Milk Dependence and How to Encourage Solid Foods – Expert Advice from Dr. Annie


Around 8 months of age, babies are expected to start embracing a wider variety of solid foods. But for many moms, the reality looks different — a baby who cries for breastmilk or bottle but pushes away solids, gags at new textures, or only eats a few bites.

At Dr. Annie Baby Nutrition, we regularly hear this concern from mothers:

“My 9-month-old just wants breastmilk. He barely eats any food. What should I do?”

Dr. Annie, Ghana’s renowned infant nutrition expert and founder of the Dr. Annie Baby Nutrition line, explains that this phase is common but needs gentle guidance to prevent nutritional gaps.


🧠 Why Is Solid Food Important After 6–8 Months?

According to Dr. Annie:

“Breastmilk or formula remains important, but after 6 months, it’s no longer enough by itself. Babies need additional energy, iron, zinc, and protein from solid foods to support rapid growth.”

By 8–9 months:

  • Milk should be gradually complemented with 2–3 small meals daily

  • Babies should start practicing with soft textures and finger foods

  • Iron stores from birth are running low, so fortified or protein-rich solids are essential


🚩 Why Do Some Babies Prefer Milk and Refuse Solids?

Here are the common causes, grouped by Dr. Annie’s diagnostic approach:


🍼 1. Overfeeding Milk

  • Frequent breastfeeding or bottle-feeding (every 1–2 hours) leaves no appetite for solids

  • Babies develop a preference for the comfort and ease of milk

What to do:

  • Space out milk feeds to 3–4 hour intervals

  • Offer solids before milk at breakfast and lunch

  • Don’t top up with milk if solids are refused — try again later instead


😝 2. Texture Aversion or Sensory Delay

Some babies struggle with the feel of lumpy, thick, or chunky food.

What to do:

  • Start with smooth but thicker purées, then slowly increase texture

  • Mix favorite foods with new ones (e.g., banana + mashed beans)

  • Use Dr. Annie 7 in 1 Cereal — smooth, tasty, and fortified with essential nutrients


😴 3. Poor Feeding Schedule or Timing

Trying to feed baby when they’re too tired, overstimulated, or already full won’t work.

What to do:

  • Stick to a 3-meal structure (8am, 12pm, 5pm) with 2 snack options

  • Use a quiet, distraction-free space

  • Feed when baby is alert, not too close to nap times


🍛 4. Bland or Repetitive Food

If food is always the same (e.g., plain mashed rice), baby may lose interest.

What to do:

  • Rotate flavours weekly — vary with yam, sweet potato, beans, plantain, and fruit

  • Add natural taste enhancers like Dr. Annie Fish or Chicken Powder

  • Introduce mild herbs like garlic, ginger, or parsley (from 9 months)


😖 5. Stressful Mealtime Environment

Force-feeding, anxiety, or distractions can make solids feel negative.

What to do:

  • Stay calm and cheerful, even if baby eats little

  • Allow baby to self-feed with fingers or spoon

  • Praise any attempt — even if food is just tasted


✅ Dr. Annie’s Feeding Guidelines for 8–12 Months

Meal What to Offer
Morning Oats + banana + Dr. Annie Dates Powder + breastmilk
Mid-morning Snack Soft plantain strips or mashed pear
Lunch Rice + kontomire + fish flakes + Dr. Annie Fish Powder
Snack Yoghurt or mashed avocado
Dinner Yam + egg yolk + Dr. Annie Chicken Powder
Bedtime Milk (breast or formula)

📈 How to Gently Shift from Milk to Solid Meals

  1. Set predictable mealtimes and reduce milk right before meals

  2. Offer small portions first (2–3 tablespoons) — don’t overwhelm

  3. Use Dr. Annie fortified cereals as a bridge — they resemble milk in texture but provide full nutrition

  4. Serve solids when baby is hungry but not crying

  5. Let baby explore food with fingers — it builds interest

  6. Reintroduce rejected foods after 3–5 days — persistence works

🧠 “Babies need up to 10–15 exposures before accepting a new food,” Dr. Annie reminds us.


❗ When to Worry

Contact a pediatrician or nutritionist if:

  • Your baby refuses all solids by 10 months

  • Gags or vomits frequently

  • Still wakes up often for night feeds past 12 months

  • Is not gaining weight or falling off the growth curve


🧡 Final Encouragement from Dr. Annie

“Solids are a journey, not a battle. With patience, practice, and nutrient-rich foods, your baby will get there. Just don’t give up.”

Transitioning from milk to solids can feel slow, but small changes — structured mealtimes, food variety, and joyful feeding — make a big difference.

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