Introducing BabyBites, the ultimate mobile-first web application to simplify and safeguard your baby’s feeding journey.
This project is maintained by dledw001
Shouldn’t feeding your child be simpler and less stressful? BabyBites is designed to help you navigate the transition from milk to solids and beyond. It removes the uncertainty from feeding with expert resources and alert notifications, ensuring your child’s meals are safe and nutritious.
The process of transitioning a baby from milk to solid foods and eventually, to more complex meals appropriate for toddlers is a crucial, yet challenging, phase for many parents and caregivers. Typically, babies begin this transition around six months, starting with pureed foods before gradually moving to more textured solids.1 This can be overwhelming for parents and caregivers, as it can be difficult to know which foods are safe at various stages, how to prepare them, and when to introduce certain utensils. This transition goes beyond simply feeding, it is about fostering safe, balanced nutrition while supporting babies and toddlers in developing essential eating skills and independence.
Parents and caregivers who want a simple and stress-free way to transition their child from milk to solid foods and beyond.
Introducing BabyBites, the ultimate mobile-first web application to simplify and safeguard your babies’ and toddlers’ feeding journey. From the first spoonful of purees to mastering utensils, BabyBites takes the stress out of transitioning from milk to solids and beyond. Designed to reduce overwhelm, the app ensures balanced nutrition and helps babies and toddlers develop healthy eating habits. This challenging transition is made easier with BabyBites, complete with features such as: a personalized baby profile, a food tracker, a food database, daily reports, and alert notifications. BabyBites provides parents and caregivers with expert-backed resources, meal preparation tips, alerts about allergies, choking hazards, and developmental milestones that will give parents and caregivers the peace of mind and the confidence to nurture their child’s growth.
Kuo, A. A., Inkelas, M., Slusser, W. M., Maidenberg, M., & Halfon, N. (2010). Introduction of Solid Food to Young Infants. Maternal and Child Health Journal, 15(8), 1185–1194. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-010-0669-5 ↩