Daily Food intake...how Much Is Too Much?

Updated on April 13, 2008
S.S. asks from Corona, CA
16 answers

I'm trying to get ideas on how to know when to say "when" with my 11 mos old daughter who wants to eat an 8 oz bottle of formula AND 4 oz of applesauce AND 2 oz of chicken? I feel like she eats enough but is always hungry for more. If I don't give it to her she screams. She will eat like this every 3 hours, give or take an hour. She just started walking (and climbing) so I thought it might be her metabolism, but yikes! I don't want a fat infant! Is this normal?

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So What Happened?

Thank you all so much!!! I've been watching her closely and told her doc about it,too. He is not worried about it at all, and I've noticed she does eat a lot, and she will eat even more if I do not give her a bottle during her meals. She will stop eating when she is done, even if it means eating an entire "normal size" meal! So, I will keep giving her the food groups and will try to not worry...I have a feeling it is ME that is the problem. Being over-weight my entire life and then losing it all just to become pregnant and gain some of it back is very hard on me. I do not want my children to experience a life of obesity like I did. Now I know what it is like to be thinner and trying to get back to that is a struggle. I will always worry that my child would share in that struggle if I do not watch her intake. But, now I know her intake is healthy (she has no allergies and we are working on losing the bottle)and I am doing a good job feeding her better food. Thanks a lot gals!!!

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S.S.

answers from Los Angeles on

I would say give her some more solid food. This will keep her satisfied longer. Try the stage 3 greber foods or start her on toddler foods. Then you should be able to cut her formula to 3 times a day.

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K.L.

answers from San Francisco on

Babies tend not to know how to overeat yet at only 11 months - if she's still wanting to eat, as long as she is eating a healthy fare, go ahead and continue to feed her. By age 12 months, most pediatricians will reccommend you take them off the bottle completely, and ONLY feed her table foods - take her having a good appetite and wanting and liking more solids as a GOOD sign. Your infant will not get fat, especially now that she is walking and climbing - she really IS hungrier because she is burning so much more energy than she was her pre-walking days. Consider taking away her bottles during the day and offer her a sippy cup of milk at meal and snacktimes: at her age, she should be eating three meals and two snacks a day (breakfast, snack, lunch, snack, dinner). Milk does not fill a child's stomach like solids do, and if she is not already sleeping through the entire night, she will begin too once shes getting mostly solids and few bottles.

My daughter was a good nurser, bottle taker, and eater since the day she was born - she seems like her tummy is a bottomless pit, but she will only ever eat until she is full. Babies just dont know how to overeat. She is now 18 months old, and still in the 90% aisle for both height and weight - she is not fat at all, in fact, but just perfect size for her height. She is 36inches tall, and weighs almost 30 lbs - she is strong and solid and such a good, healthy eater. Babies can only become obese because of the actions of their parents - giving their infants soda in bottles and things full of preservatives and sugar make babies fat, not feeding them a good balanced diet. My daughters meals are as follows, just to give you an idea:
-Breakfast: two eggs OR serving of oatmeal, 1 container of yogurt, one serving of fruit, milk.
- Lunch: main dish (such as pasta, mac and cheese, sandwich, etc) serving of vegetables, serving of cheese, milk.
-Snack: fruit, ghram crackers, milk.
-Dinner: whatever we have.

She eats "human" sized portions at every meal. SO, feed your daughter more solids, less formula, and offer her sippy cups with whole milk. If she likes the solids, feed an array of flavors and let her eat until she is finished. Trust me, so many mothers would love to NOT have to worry about their picky toddlers!

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A.D.

answers from San Francisco on

I've always had problems with weight and compulsive overeating, was teased a lot about being fat as a kid, and I felt a little nervous about my daughter. At 9 months she looked like a cross between Winston Churchill and Pugsley Addams. By 13 months all that chub had dissolved into muscle, she'd grown several inches and she had a six-pack tummy because she loved to hang upside down off my lap or arm, and pull herself up by sheer strength and will. There were days when she'd eat everything in sight (I never brought chocolate into the house!). She'd look a little puppyfattish for a couple of ... hours... and then boing! the next morning she'd be taller again. After growth spurts it seemed like she barely ate, lived on air and strawberries. Then suddenly she'd be hungry all the time again and I'd just clean up after lunch before she wanted a snack! With research and support from my friends, I learned to really relax about it - your stomach is naturally about the size of your fist, and if you pay attention to its signals and eat healthy food, you'll do great. For exercise, I recommend rolling around on the grass, dancing around the living room, and exploring the neighborhood on foot. Weight will take care of itself.

I read something once about a professional dancer who followed a small child around for an entire day and did everything the kid did. By the end of the day, the dancer was utterly exhausted. I don't know if it's an urban legend, but I believe it!

best of luck!
A.

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T.C.

answers from San Francisco on

First of all, babies are supposed to be fat. Unless your doctor tells you that your child is obese, why would you restrict her calories? DOn't worry, walking turned my chubby little infant into a bean pole toddler and he eats TONS!!!

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B.M.

answers from San Diego on

I think if you ask her doctor they will tell you, but if she is just starting to walk and climb, then she probably needs more than before and gets hungry faster. My daughters doctor told me that at this age they don't eat for fun and taste like we do they just eat until they are full, so if your daughter is still hungry i'd keep feeding her until she is full. I think because of the media and so many other things we get a little too worried about weight in our children when we should just worry about nutrition.

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M.C.

answers from Honolulu on

Give it to her!!! And thank your lucky stars that she is a good eater!!! She's hungry because she's busy - she doesn't have an "overeating" problem - yet - unless you make food an issue. give her a huge variety, too (within guidelines of advisable foods, of course) like tofu, avocados, and other stuff that you might not even eat yourself (all healthy choices only). It is a beautiful thing to be able to eat as much as you want, and if she enjoys healthy foods at this age, maybe you can keep her away from the french fries and oreos for a little bit longer that most kids!

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R.S.

answers from Los Angeles on

It is sad and unfortunate that your concern is a "fat" infant. It is essential that children are nourished sufficiently, even including fat. This is why we are supposed to give children whole fat milk until the age of five. So many parents are mislead by this fear of fat kids that they miss the importance of fat and nourishment in a child's diet. A child's healthy brain development is dependent upon fat. The fat is necessary for it to build up around the brain cells in order to facilitate neurological synapses. This process ONLY happens in the first 5 years. After that, that's it. These fat cells form by the age of 5. Be thankful your child is an eater. Children need nourishment. They are growing so rapidly and are so active. They need all they can get. I work in preschool, and my brightest children are the ones who eat the best!! Just make sure it is nutritious and your child will be perfectly FINE!!! I specifically asked this in a child nutrition class because so many of my parents want to have their kids on diets!! I knew this wasn't right, I just wanted to find out why. Brain Development. It's all about the brain. Not the fat. good luck.

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T.L.

answers from Las Vegas on

wow i thought my 11 mo son ate a lot its ok they will eat like this till they hit 20 years old it goes in a cycle they will eat a lot when they are growing or need to intake more food for energy or for growing so dont be worried when it switches from lots of food to just a little they will let you know what they need and as far as a fat baby as long as he or she is 7 pounds or less over the average weight do worry if it becomes more then that dr time.

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J.S.

answers from Stockton on

I think it's more of making sure what she eats is healthy. We as adults tend to get over weight when we eat unhealthy things which are high in calories and fat and have no nutritial value. At her age you control what she eats which puts you at an advantage. I think so long as she's eating healthy veggies and fruit and things that are good for her she'll know when she's full.

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R.S.

answers from San Francisco on

i have a friend who has a daughter that would eat until she was sick. so she started feeding her and then playing with her at various intervals while she was eating. if she still wanted food she would point to it and ask. and when she was more interested in playing than eating, she was done. i don't know if that helps, but it all i have on this. good luck!

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J.A.

answers from Los Angeles on

I would first try drop back to a 6 oz bottle, especially if she's falling asleep with it. Also, try adding a little baby cereal to the apple sauce, AFTER she's had the chicken. As long as you are not introducing unhealthy options such as cookies, fries, chips, or such, then she should be fine. My ped, who's also my doc, says "No one EVER got too fat from eatting too much fresh fruit and vegetables. It's the cooked food and hiden calories and fat of our beverages that we have to be careful about."

I don't recall if the MAX that should be allowed for a child that eats solids is 24 or 32 oz of milk/ formula. If she's drinking more than this, its time to taper it down. If she really screams because it's not enough formula, try adding an extra 1-2 oz water to the formula at the next feeding. This way she gets 8 oz liquid, but only nutrients and calories of 6 oz. of formula.

One other Idea- my ped put my son on whole milk at 10 1/2 months because he was the size of an 18 month old. If she is a big girl (as in height/weight are 90% or greater; my son was off the charts) then talk to her ped to see if she might be ready for whole milk.

Just some ideas to try, ~J

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D.C.

answers from Fresno on

Little ones are growing and developing so much and need lots of energy to do it. I wouldn't worry about her food intake, as long as it's healthy stuff.

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S.P.

answers from Sacramento on

I have often thought that my child may eat too much at times. the good news is... she has no food issues. she has no body image issues. she is eating what her body wants. if she over eats she will 'spit up'. even at one year my youngest has done just that. when she is full she stops eating. sometimes she does not want vegetables but will eat protien. the other night she refused to eat protein and ate around 1 cup of green beans. as long as you don't see her being sick i wouldn't worry.

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D.P.

answers from San Diego on

I would say if she ever gets sick from eating too much, that would be a sign that you might want to monitor her intake closely. From your example the only thing I would suggest is that you give her protein first because proteins are filling and saticfy hunger, then cereal(breads, pastas, grains, etc) and last her milk. Our stomachs register as full after 15 minutes from the first bites. If 15 minutes into eating she still wants more, it may be a growth spurt. Hope this helps.

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B.H.

answers from Los Angeles on

11 mos and still eating healthy? You are amazing. In my line of work I see so many moms cave into the "junk food fix". I honour you and your committment to the health of your child.

Bodies require food every 2-4 hours. It is the healthiest for the metobolism. As long as she is eating healthy choices (please check what is in the applesauce, sometimes the sugar along causes a spike in hunger) there are no worries.

Enjoy the fact that she is eating. Give her the healthy eating habits now that will last a lifetime.

B.
www.HeyYouGetReal.com

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K.F.

answers from Stockton on

Hi S.,
Here is how I've always judged if my kids are getting too much dairy. This may sound gross but, here goes. Whenever I changed my kids diapers and when I was potty training them, I'd look at their poop. If it is really light or white then they're drinking too much milk. Also, if they're having a hard time or straining to make a bowel movement, then they're getting too much dairy. Too much dairy can cause constipation.
I hope this helps.
Good Luck,
K.

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