On Nov 22, 9:57*am, Andy > wrote:
> "Ms P" > wrote:
>
> > "john hamilton" > wrote in message
> ...
> >> If a very young baby of a few months does not have access to their
> >> mother's
> >> milk, what would be the nearest substitute food to give the child?
>
> >> Ignoring cow's milk and other animal milks, (and powdered formula
> >> milk); what would be the most suitable mixture of food stuffs to make
> >> up?
>
> > Jello works. *All of my kids and their cousins were allergic to any
> > type of milk when they were babies. *The sister in law with the oldest
> > baby fed hers liquid jello or baby rice blenderized with water. *By
> > the time my oldest son was born they had come out with the soy
> > formulas and he got switched over as soon as my sister in law
> > discovered he was having the same problems as her oldest daughter.
>
> > Ms P
>
> I was thinking of the Jell-O puddings.
>
> http://alturl.com/vxv34
>
> I wouldn't want a newborn eating dangerous food additives so read the
> ingredients. If YOU don't know what any are, don't feed it to the
> newborn.
>
> And dilute pudding and gelatin down with twice as much water since their
> taste buds aren't developed yet and it will be more drinkable and more
> servings.
>
> Or not!
>
> Andy
Now you're a pediatric nutritionist!