Marcus Leroux
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Mothers can pass on a love for new foods to their babies via their breast milk, research has suggested.
By eating particular foods up to an hour before feeding time, a mother can create the equivalent of a milk shake and help the baby to become used to new flavours, according to the University of Copenhagen study.
Researchers found that women could make their milk taste of bananas, menthol, caraway seed and liquorice.Concentrations of caraway and liquorice peaked after two hours, while banana was found in breast milk only for the first hour after it had been eaten. Menthol remained in the milk for up to eight hours.
Helene Hausner, who led the research, told New Scientist magazine: “It's not like if the mother eats apple pie the baby thinks, ‘Mmm, apple pie', but it may make them more accepting of the flavour of other foods.”
A Birmingham University study found that babies raised on beige foods such as rusks and baby food from a jar develop a taste for other beige foods, such as chips.
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I'm a mother of three grown up daughters and a grandmother of six. My mother and grandmother in Sri Lanka used to tell us that the food we ate when breast feeding had an effect on the baby's digestion. This was mainly apparent if the mother ate very hot spicy food or ate a lot of fruit such as papaw
IRANGANIE H. FERNANDO, LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM
This is =NOT= news. Dairy farmers around the world have dealt with this problem for generations!
Jim Sterling, Modesto, California, USA
I recently sent my husband out for a Chinese takeaway in the happy anticipatition of enjoying some pak choi and other delicious seasonal vegetables. He managed to come back with a dinner that was entirely beige in tone, including water chestnuts for the vegetables. Yes, he was a bottle fed baby!
Elizabeth, Luton, UK