Anonymous wrote:Many babies a few generations ago were fed an evaporated milk based "formula" prepared at home. The old versions of Dr. Spock's famous book gave a recipe for it. I think his recipe may have used Karo corn syrup.Formula is so darned expensive; I suppose some people may try to economize by using similar methods.
Not saying I think this is a great idea, but also not judging people who do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be terrified to do that - a lot of time, money and research has gone into crafting a good recipe for formula. I don't think you can just whip up a batch with your hand mixer and call it a day.
Why isn't she nursing?
The issue isn't nursing. Many women do not nurse. But, I would be concerned about baby getting all the nutritional needs met.
Don't be obtuse. The point is that if someone is that obsessed about "natural" formula, it seems odd that they aren't using the most natural formula of all - breastmilk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be terrified to do that - a lot of time, money and research has gone into crafting a good recipe for formula. I don't think you can just whip up a batch with your hand mixer and call it a day.
Why isn't she nursing?
The issue isn't nursing. Many women do not nurse. But, I would be concerned about baby getting all the nutritional needs met.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be terrified to do that - a lot of time, money and research has gone into crafting a good recipe for formula. I don't think you can just whip up a batch with your hand mixer and call it a day.
Why isn't she nursing?
The issue isn't nursing. Many women do not nurse. But, I would be concerned about baby getting all the nutritional needs met.
Anonymous wrote:I would be terrified to do that - a lot of time, money and research has gone into crafting a good recipe for formula. I don't think you can just whip up a batch with your hand mixer and call it a day.
Why isn't she nursing?