Anonymous wrote:Great idea, I didn't think of that. I guess you should use what your baby will drink in one sitting. So usually 4oz as a small baby and 8 oz for a bigger baby.
Anonymous wrote:I've always frozen 6oz amounts.
And people- they make freezable large mouth mason jars!!
If you're looking to not use plastic, why not just feed the baby fresh? I only froze about 100oz or so as a backup and fed my baby fresh daily. I would pump into the bottles she'd eat the next day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Definitely don't do a large jar, it will never defrost. If you must do jars, go with small quantities; I would do 4 oz personally. But the Honeysuckle bags are best.
Also remember that the more you transfer, the more you lose as residue on the old container. So pump into the bottle you will use if at all possible, and otherwise into a container you'll only transfer once. Is there a drinking nipple attachment for mason jars?
I pumped directly into the little freezer bags, 3-4 ounces per bag. Lay them flat to freeze, then "file" them in the ice cube bin, oldest in front.
Anonymous wrote:Is this the same OP who wanted to pump on a public train/bus?
Anonymous wrote:Definitely don't do a large jar, it will never defrost. If you must do jars, go with small quantities; I would do 4 oz personally. But the Honeysuckle bags are best.
Also remember that the more you transfer, the more you lose as residue on the old container. So pump into the bottle you will use if at all possible, and otherwise into a container you'll only transfer once. **Is there a drinking nipple attachment for mason jars?**