17 Month Old Would Rather Eat His Pick-up Food, than Most of His Spoon Foods

Updated on April 03, 2010
S.B. asks from Lincoln, NE
12 answers

Worried and wondering, but he won't eat all of his spoon-foods like Yobaby yogurt, applesauce or even sweet potatoes, etc.. These are his favorites! He'd rather eat his pick-up food, like chicken, grapes, noodles, cheese, etc. and then barely drinks milk at lunch and supper and doesn't really feel like eating his spoon foods. I usually feed him milk, pick-up foods and then spoon-foods. I don't believe he's teething (was teething bad a couple weeks ago along with red cheeks and a butt rash). Even when he was teething he's had a very good appetite (he eats very well - finishes everything, but isn't obese and will "tell" me when he's done eating), 1-2 bowel movements per day, gets his daily vitamin supplements, 90th percentile, and just generally healthy. I'm worried, because this isn't his usual routine and this began this past week. He also drinks water and juice and has an afternoon snack of pick-up foods like crackers or grapes.

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So What Happened?

Thanks for the responses and suggestions! I'm working on "weaning" him off the spoon-foods, but from what it sounds he does want to do thing himself (duh, the signs were there) especially when he reaches for the spoon himself. He doesn't quite get the "spoon in mouth on his own" thing, but it's a slow work in progress. He'd rather pick up and eat. I guess I need to get more things to cut up for him, like cantalope (he likes) and cut the sweet potatoes rather than mush as an example. He does LOVE pickles. I was worried that if I just leave it to pick-ups he'll go hungry. Plus, yeah at times I've noticed he wants to see what's going on around him (like stare at the ceiling fan or look outside). I guess things get really interesting from this point forward :) THANK YOU! This is why I love this site, I don't feel like I asked a dumb question.

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S.D.

answers from Minneapolis on

This is normal. At his age, he should be feeding himself completely. He no longer needs to be fed or needs baby foods. When it is meal time, just give him his plate of food, all of his foods, and let him feed himself, in whatever order he wants. Also, just put his cup of milk in front of him with his foods and he can take a drink when he needs. Again, at his age, he is going to be getting more nutrition from his foods than milk. It is all very age appropriate. :) It sounds like he is showing some independence and possibly some likes/dislikes.
S.
mom of 3 and daycare provider

1 mom found this helpful

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D.B.

answers from Charlotte on

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2 moms found this helpful
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M.D.

answers from Eau Claire on

At this age, he is ready to be done with baby foods. My son eats food he can pick up with his fingers, and is feeding himself with both a spoon and a fork. Sometimes I still feed him myself, mostly when it is a really soupy-soup or oatmeal, but as he gains confidence with his spoon/fork I let him feed himself more and more challenging things. He will eat regular yogurt sometimes, once in a while applesauce (this used to be his favorite thing, and now he hardly ever wants it), and whatever else Mommy and Daddy are eating. :-) We sit at the table and eat with him, so he is used to regular meal times. I rarely give him juice, because there is so much sugar in juice. He loves it when I cube up fresh orange for him; it's like his candy.

Kids this age will also start going through stages. For a while my son loved to have a midmorning and midafternoon snack of animal crackers. They were such a treat! Now he never wants them. Sometimes he wants scrambled eggs for breakfast and bites of a cheese/turkey sandwich for lunch, and other times he just wants a monstrous bowl of oatmeal for breakfast and nothing for lunch, except for 2-4 bites of something.

Right now we are in the stage of "Is it okay for me to spit/dribble my food out of my mouth, Mother?" There is always something they are testing the boundary with!

He sounds perfectly healthy and normal. Cut back on the juice a lot, give up on the baby foods, encourage his self-feeding, and don't worry. Kids enjoy trying different foods. Remember how much there is out there! He knows the yogurt, applesauce, and sweet potatoes. Now he is discovering the joy of chicken, grapes, noodles, cheese, etc. and also feeding himself!

Next week he will probably not want said chicken, grapes, noodles, or cheese, and instead will like something else– cheerios and pickles, for example. My son loved pickles but wouldn't touch a grape if his life depended on it. This month he switched.

Kids! :-)

God bless!
M. D

2 moms found this helpful
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M.S.

answers from Minneapolis on

I can't read all the answers right now either... but will say this: instead of mashing a sweet potato, just bake it with the skin on (about an hour at 375-400ish). I cut my ds's into disks and then 9 pieces from the disks. It does take awhile to cool, so plan for that time. And enjoy the freedom from having to feed him! And for yogurt, I put about 1/3 of the yobaby container in a small bowl and give her a spoon. I've found the take and toss spoons the best, they have a deeper bowl than baby spoons, but not as big as the Ikea spoons, and they wash quick!

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S.R.

answers from Seattle on

My kids were always more interested in the foods that they can do themselves. Its my guess that its about what is easiest for him and what he enjoys. Independance! Honestly they will go through things they will like and then decide they are done with it. Try something new that he hasnt had before then try rotating it so its something new. It just might make it more fun. As far as milk goes I was told that although its important for them to have as long as they are getting enough calcium from cheese or other sources that its not to big of a deal.

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J.P.

answers from Boise on

My ped said that at this age, they just want to cruise and may go on a hunger strike because they are more interested in what is around them than food. She said that food should be served at the table, rather than giving them the option of cruising with it. Do you feed the spoon foods, or does he? It is messy, but he may want to do it himself. Otherwise, I say, let him eat the fingerfood, and pick your battles. This may just be one of many trends.

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L.O.

answers from Detroit on

once babies can put food in their won mouth they do not like to be spoon fed.. give him a spoon and let him try.. it will be messy.

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N.F.

answers from Seattle on

Yep I agree with most of the other moms. He's more excited about using his fingers to eat rather than using his spoon. Next week or so it might flip the other way around haha. Nothing to worry about, he is perfectly healthy. Like you said... he lets you know when he is done. He has a preference and those will constantly be changing. Just be ready to except those changes as they come.

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C.C.

answers from Tampa on

He's being independent and wants to do it himself. My son stopped letting me feed him around that age and has only recently started letting me put food on a utensil and hand it to him so he can put it in his mouth. Currently he thinks this is a blast and has been eating like a little piglet.

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W.E.

answers from Sacramento on

how about giving him sliced apples or sweet taters instead? he may just be done with baby food.

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A.P.

answers from Orlando on

I haven't read all the responses, but I'd just say that you've done well to spoon feed this long. My daughter refused to be fed as soon as she figured out how to pick up food and my 7 month old is taking the same path.

As long as there are no other sensory disorders present, they won't starve quietly. I read recently that an 18 month can survive on 8 tbsps of food per day. We think they should eat much more than they need. In fact, it's a pretty new idea that babies need purees, it used to be that they ate soft mushable food and gnawed on harder things. Google baby led weaning!

There were a few months that my daughter would only eat peaches, yogurt and cheese plus milk and water. She's two and 31 pounds.

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S.B.

answers from Redding on

Your son sounds like he's doing fantastic!
Why worry?
Between now and 3 years old, his habits and routines will REALLY change and there's nothing wrong with that. It's normal.
At this age, my children wouldn't eat anything that even resembled baby food. They either used their fingers or their own little spoons to feed themselves.
He's doing great in my opinion.

He wants to feed himself. Let him.

Best wishes!

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