Organic Baby Food Oklahoma City OK

Babies are born with a dislike of bitter tastes—part of our innate defense against poisonous plants. Babies can, however, overcome that bias, even for strong vegetables like broccoli and brussels sprouts, if their mothers eat those plants pre- and postpartum.

OSU-OKC Farmers Market
(405) 945-3326
400 North Portland
Oklahoma City, OK
Tinker Bell Farms
(405) 733-7180
Midwest City, OK
Norman Farmers Market
(405) 360-4721
615 East Robinson St.
Norman, OK
Crestview Inc. Farms
(405) 823-2430
Arcadia, OK
Akin's Natural Foods Market
(405) 843-3033
2924 Nw 63rd St
Oklahoma City, OK
The Children's Center Farmers Market
(405) 613-5343
6800 Northwest 39th Expressway
Bethany, OK
Eastern Oklahoma County Farmers Market
(405) 390-8276
2001 North Harper St.; Choctaw Creek Park
Choctaw, OK
Edmond Farmers Market
(405) 359-4629
First Street, between Boulevard & Littler; 1st St. west of Broadway
Edmond, OK
Rose-Hip Farm
(405) 447-3276
Norman, OK
Native Roots Market
405-310-6300
132 West Main St
Norman, OK
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Get Them Hooked on Veggies Young

By Meghan Rabbitt

If children are going to learn to love vegetables and other good-for-you foods, it’s important to expose them to healthy fare early on. How early? Starting in utero and continuing through breast-feeding, says new research from the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia. “Flavors from a mother’s diet are transmitted through the amniotic fluid and breast milk, helping a baby learn to like a food’s taste,” says Julie Mennella, a biopsychologist at the Center and lead author of the study. The researchers found that babies whose mothers drank carrot juice while pregnant or breast-feeding showed a greater preference for the veggie itself than those born to women who had not drunk the juice.

Mennella explains that babies are born with a dislike of bitter tastes—part of our innate defense against poisonous plants. Babies can, however, overcome that bias, even for strong vegetables like broccoli and brussels sprouts, if their mothers eat those plants pre- and postpartum. Another example from the study: Older babies who were both breast-feeding and eating solids initially refused green beans but began to like them once their nursing mothers started eating them.

Author: Meghan Rabbitt

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