About 1000 it really doesnt madder though
Baby food... breast milk...
A baby's first milk should ideally be breast-milk from the baby's mother. If breast feeding is not possible, or wanted, then specially formulated baby milk should be used.
Soy milk does not contain the nutrients that a baby needs as food and if the baby is not getting these nutrients (best provided by mothers breast milk) it will not develop properly.
Yes, you can supplement breast milk with baby formula, on occasion. Breast milk is best, but if that is not possible, then formula is the next best thing.
My answer to this question is a question....Why baby food. Why not BREAST MILK? There are thousands of reasons to feed breast milk vs "baby food" my child went from "mommy milk" straight to pureed sweet potatoes. Breast milk is the best, by far. I recommend nursing for a year. Each of my children (6!) have been breast fed and are so healthy. Remember that YOUR diet while nursing makes THEIR diet, so eat healthfully. and then start them on a diet of pureed organic if you can afford it fruits and vegetables! NEVER take them to buger joints and never give them sugary junk.
Formula, if it comes from a can, breast milk if it comes from the baby's mother.
To nurse your baby! Breast milk does not come in until 3-4 days after you have given birth. During pregnancy and immediately following birth your breasts contain colostrum. This is a thin, clear or yellowish fluid that is rich in nutrients. The colostrum will be nourishment or food for baby until the breast milk comes in.
milk?
It can't unless the milk is scalding hot..which it isn't, fresh breast milk is usually the body temperature of the mother, which is perfect for the baby
No give it breast milk
As a female and like all the mammifers, woman have to feed her progeniture. The presence of a breast allows the female human to make milk and to deliver this food to her baby.
As your baby nurses, your breasts will refill. You will need to wean your baby from breastfeeding. This means tapering off, not stopping cold turkey. As the "demand" for breast milk decreases, so will the production of milk decrease.