POOJA KOTHARIMom of a 8 yr 5 m old boy3 years agoA. Yes, it's safe to feed your baby cold milk. In fact, frozen breast milk can be used as a form of pain relief for teething babies!“There is no scientific basis to the idea that cold milk would upset a baby's stomach more than warmed milk,” says Hays. “Per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, breast milk does not need to be warmed. It can be served at room temperature or cold.” “Cold breast milk is absolutely safe.A breastfed baby usually prefers to feed from a body of milk warmed to or room temperature after it warms to body temperature when feeding. In their tummy, babies are less able to digest warmer milk than they are in other cold liquids.Buttermilk has the same proteins as found in the milk. This can be a major cause for allergies. It might also cause cold and cough in babies. Hence it is always better to start giving buttermilk made from diluted yogurt to your baby after 11 months.It's best to wait until after a baby is 6 months old before offering juice. But even then, pediatricians don't recommend giving babies juice often. That's because it adds extra calories without the balanced nutrition in formula and breast milk.A breastfed baby usually prefers to feed from a body of milk warmed to or room temperature after it warms to body temperature when feeding. In their tummy, babies are less able to digest warmer milk than they are in other cold liquids.“There is no scientific basis to the idea that cold milk would upset a baby's stomach more than warmed milk,” says Hays. “Per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, breast milk does not need to be warmed. It can be served at room temperature or cold.” “Cold breast milk is absolutely safe.avoid giving watery food like buttermilk as it fills baby's small stomach and reduces the appetite for other food where as baby's stomach capacity is less but nutrient and energy requirements are high, so baby should be given nutrient dense and energy dense food.
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