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How to Prepare Blueberries for Baby

Blueberries is safe for babies from 6 months old. How you prepare it changes as your baby grows. Here is exactly what to do at each stage.

Choking risk: medium

Medium choking risk. Follow the prep guidance below carefully and stay within arm's reach.

1

6 to 8 months

Palmar grasp stage

Halve or quarter fresh blueberries - whole blueberries are a choking risk under 12 months. Or mash lightly into yogurt or cereal. Frozen blueberries (thawed and halved) work well.

At this age, babies grab food with their whole fist. Serve fruit pieces long enough to poke out the top of their grip.

Shape and size

Cut into thick spears or wide wedges, roughly the width and length of an adult finger. Leave skin on for grip if the skin is soft.

How soft?

Ripe fruit can often be served raw if it is soft enough to mash between your fingers. Harder fruits should be steamed or roasted until very soft.

Portion guide

Start with 1-2 pieces per meal. Most of it will end up on the floor. That is normal and expected.

2

9 to 11 months

Pincer grasp developing

Halved blueberries for pincer grip practice. Whole frozen (not fresh) can be offered earlier due to softness when thawed.

Babies start picking up smaller pieces between thumb and forefinger. You can offer smaller, bite-sized pieces alongside larger wedges.

Shape and size

Offer a mix: some wedges for fist-gripping, plus small pieces the size of a blueberry for pincer grasp practice.

How soft?

Most ripe fruit can be served raw. Cut to size and check that it yields when pressed gently.

Portion guide

2-3 tablespoons of prepared fruit per meal, offered alongside breastmilk or formula. Appetite varies day to day.

3

12+ months

Toddler self-feeding

Whole blueberries as a snack, in pancakes, yogurt, baked goods.

Toddlers can handle more textures and smaller pieces. Focus on variety and letting them practice with utensils.

Shape and size

Bite-sized pieces or thin slices. Can also serve whole for small fruits (halved grapes, whole blueberries after 12 months).

How soft?

Serve fruit the same way the rest of the family eats it, just cut smaller. Raw is fine for most ripe fruits.

Portion guide

About 1/4 cup per serving, though toddlers are unpredictable. Some days they eat everything, some days they eat nothing.

Freezing Blueberries for baby

Spread fresh blueberries in a single layer on a baking sheet and freeze until solid, then transfer to bags. No blanching needed.

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Disclaimer: This page is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult your pediatrician before introducing new foods.