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Sabine’s Organic Baby Food Blog

Feed Your Baby Organic – Every Day

By Sabine on 3 September 2010

I am an organic baby

Don't panic - I am organic

Today marks the launch of this year’s Organic Fortnight – the UK’s biggest celebration of all things organic. This year the theme is ‘choosing organic everyday’, and feeding your baby organically everyday has never been easier. Of course, when we buy organic we are not only looking after the welfare of ourselves or our precious babies and children, we are looking after the planet that we leave to our future generations.

The UK Government has committed in law to cutting the country’s greenhouse emissions 80% by 2050. This is a huge target for which we all have a responsibility. And with our industrialised food and farming system currently responsible for around 30% of UK’s current emissions it’s clear to me that we need to make some fundamental changes to the way we grow and eat our food.

Only radical changes to our diets and farming systems can achieve the level of greenhouse gas cuts needed. And some of these changes can be made the next time you shop. Buying organic and biodynamic baby food and supporting organic farming, alongside a shift to eating less and mainly grass-fed meat and dairy products, can be a simple first step for anyone who takes climate change seriously.

Feed Your Baby Organic with Ulula

Keep your eyes open for local events near you during the coming fortnight and discover why organic is good for you and your baby’s well-being as well as that of our planet; is kind to animals and wildlife; and allows us all to make a big difference – simply through the way we shop.

And remember, every single item of baby food, toddler food and every skin care product that Ulula sells is certified organic, with many of our foods even being certified  as biodynamic. Look for the certification logos on all our packs – producers can only legally display those logos if they meet very particular and strict farming criteria.

So, have fun shopping for your baby and yourself and remember that every shopping choice you make is a vote for the future of our planet as well as the future health and well being of you and your family.

PS Many thanks to customer Abbie for allowing us to use a picture of her beautiful daughter – another gorgeous Holle baby.

Ulula Listed in Book of Green Guide to Ethical Businesses

By Sabine on 12 June 2010

Once again I am pleased that Ulula is listed in the latest edition of the ‘Book of Green’, a handy A5 sized directory of green and ethical companies.

Thousands of copies of the printed guide are being distributed free to help consumers find environmentally friendly, sustainable, fair trade, organic, natural, ethical and socially responsible products and services. Ulula is proudly listed as the organic baby food supplier.

If you would rather browse the guide online it is available as a flip magazine with clickable links to relevant websites from www.bookofgreen.co.uk. Alternatively, there is a free iPhone app that puts the entire directory in your pocket. Not only that, you can keep up to date with all the latest news from each of the listed companies through the app’s in-built Twitter browser.

The Book of Green is an excellent reference when shopping for ethical and environmentally friendly products and services and Ulula is proud to be involved. Let me know how you like the guide.

Filed under: Miscellaneous,The Ulula Ethos — Tags:

Five Reasons to Choose Organic Baby Food

By Sabine on 28 May 2010

Organic baby food is good for your baby and planet; it is kind to our animals and wildlife and choosing organic baby food allows consumers to make a big difference – simply through the way you shop. With all these benefits, it’s easy to see why organic food delivers such good value for money.

Choosing Organic Baby Food is Better for the Planet

Amazingly, over 20% of the UK’s greenhouse gas emissions today come from food and farming. Nitrogen fertiliser manufacturing is the worst offender. To produce just one tonne takes one tonne of oil, seven tonnes of greenhouse gasses and one hundred tonnes of water. Organic farmers work with nature to feed the soil and control pests.

By putting less stress on the environment, organic is a more sustainable choice, especially as around 30% of the average consumer’s carbon ‘footprint’ comes from their food choices. By choosing organic baby food – you can significantly reduce your carbon footprint.

Organic Baby Food is Better for Your Baby

Organic baby foods have  higher amounts of beneficial minerals, essential amino acids and vitamins than other baby foods. Organic baby food avoid pesticides and all controversial additives including aspartame, tartrazine, MSG and hydrogenated fats. Organic food contains higher levels of vitamin C and minerals like calcium, magnesium and iron as well as cancer-fighting antioxidants and Omega 3.

International studies find that organic plant products contain more anti-oxidants such as phenols and salicylic acid, known to protect against cancer and heart disease. The same studies also show that organic animal products contain more polyunsaturated fatty acids, which also help to protect against heart disease.

Organic Baby Foods are Kind to Animals

Animal welfare is at the heart of organic food systems. Organic food standards for meat and animal products rigorously protect all aspects of animal wellbeing – from rearing, feeding and shelter, to transportation and slaughter. Organic animals are free to pursue natural behaviour because they have plenty of outside space to thrive and grow, and are not routinely drugged with antibiotics. Organic standards prohibit cruelty and guarantee truly free-range lives for farm animals.

Many shoppers don’t realise that organic meat and animal products are also free range. Where Ulula baby foods contain eggs and meat the organic certification symbol guarantees you that the animals  have been reared to the highest level of free-range standards. Birds are looked after in much smaller flocks, spend most of their lives roaming outside on fresh grass and have much more space in their houses.

Buying Organic Baby Food Encourages Wildlife

The UK Government’s own advisors found that plant, insect and bird life is up to 50% greater on organic farms. Organic farming relies on wildlife to help control natural pests, so wide field edges are left uncultivated for bugs, birds and bees to flourish. They are also not sprayed away by the fertilisers, chemicals and pesticides routinely used on non-organic farms.

Organic Baby Foods are Guaranteed GM Free

Genetically modified (GM) crops and ingredients are banned under organic standards. Shoppers wanting to avoid GM products may be surprised to know that over a million tonnes of GM crops are imported each year to feed non-organic livestock, which in turn supply our supermarkets with pork, bacon, milk, cheese and other dairy products.

Is there really a better place to think about the environment than at the table where a mother feeds her baby? Every mouthful we feed to our babies is a vote for, or against, the planet and the survival of future generations. Let me know your thoughts and experiences.

Ulula Organic Baby Food Listed in Book of Green, THE Eco Living Directory

By Sabine on 1 July 2009

Book of Green - free to all customers while stocks last

Book of Green - free to all customers

I am pleased to let you all know that Ulula is listed in the first edition of the ‘Book of Green’, a handy A5 sized directory of green and ethical companies.

30 000 copies of the printed guide are being distributed free to help consumers find environmentally friendly, sustainable, fair trade, organic, natural, ethical and socially responsible products and services. Ulula is listed as the organic baby food supplier.

Free Guides for Ulula Customers

I am also really pleased to be chosen as a distributor of the printed guide and, as an added service to our customers, will be popping a free copy in with all orders that Ulula sends out with Parcelforce. I shall limit this offer to one per customer, but if you know someone who is desperate for a guide let me know when you place your next order and I’ll send along a second copy.

If you would rather browse the guide online it is available as a flip magazine with clickable links to relevant websites from www.bookofgreen.co.uk.

The Book of Green is an excellent reference when shopping for ethical and environmentally friendly products and services and Ulula is proud to be involved. Let me know how you like the guide.

Filed under: Miscellaneous,The Ulula Ethos — Tags:

Holle Organic Baby Food & Weaning Advisor – Now Available to Download

By Sabine on 30 June 2009

Holle Organic Baby Food Advisor

Holle Organic Baby Food Advisor

I just thought I would quickly remind customers and other site visitors that the Holle Organic Baby Food and Weaning Advisor is available to download from the Ulula website.

This handy 40 page booklet is full of useful information on feeding your baby, from birth onwards, and includes information on weaning babies using natural, organic foods.

I do send along a free printed copy of the advisor with all first time orders of any Holle organic baby milk or baby food but I also know from customer calls that the online version is also much appreciated, so please feel free to download it.

Here then is the Holle Organic Baby Food Advisor in PDF format (1.12 Mb): Holle Organic Baby Food Advisor

Holle tell us that they will be re-printing their baby food and weaning advisor. So here is your chance also to let us know what you would like to be included in the guide. Send us your comments and we’ll forward them on to Holle. Thanks.

Filed under: Miscellaneous,The Ulula Ethos — Tags:

Fats and Sugars in Organic Baby Biscuits and Snacks – Some Thoughts

By Sabine on 5 May 2009

Baby waiting for his food - sent in by a customer

Baby waiting for his food - sent in by a customer

Following recent news headlines relating to the levels of fats and sugars in common brands of baby foods such as finger foods, biscuits and snacks, I thought I would give my initial reactions followed by some nutritional information on the Holle range of organic finger foods for babies.

I strongly believe that babies and young children deserve to be given wholesome foods that nurture both their body and soul. Because of the age of babies and children we are talking about here, it is imcumbent on their parents to provide such foods – young babies are entirely dependent on us for all their needs.

The Ulula Ethos

The Ulula ethos regarding the baby foods we chose to sell is only to supply foods that:

  • Are certified to high organic or Demeter standards;
  • Are guaranteed to contain no genetically modified ingredients;
  • Have no added processed sugar;
  • Have no added salt (unless absolutely essential for a baking process)
  • Contain no hydrogenated/trans fats;
  • Contain no added flavourings;
  • Contain no added colourings;
  • Contain no added preservatives.
  • Are produced using the gentlest cooking methods available for that food type

We only want to supply foods that have a place in helping parents feed their babies wholesome and nurturing foods.

Not All Organic Baby Foods Are Equal

With many things in life, not everything we buy is of an equally high standard – baby food is no exception. Disappointingly, not even all organically certified baby foods are of the same standard. I don’t believe it is good business practice for me to identify individual companies here but I am so confident in the Holle baby foods that I recommend you  just compare the contents and quality with anything else you can buy.

So, What About the Fats?

The Children’s Food Campaign report identified a number of baby biscuits and snacks that contain high amounts of  fats. Some baby finger foods have been reported as having a higher proportion of fats and saturated fats than many ‘junk foods’.

While there are recommended maximum nutritional guidelines for dietary saturated fat content for men (30g), women (20g) and children aged 5 to 10 (also 20g), there is actually no maximum recommended level for infants – they naturally need more fat in their diet than adults because they are growing and need a higher intake of energy.

Foods though are said to be high in saturated fat if they contain more than 5g of saturates per 100g. Foods containing 1.5g or less per 100g are said to be low in saturated fat.

How Holle Baby Snacks and Finger Foods Compare

A number of other brands of  popular baby biscuits were mentioned by the Children’s Food Campaign. The report itself did not mention the Holle range, but I am very happy to provide the nutritional information:

As for the sugar content of each, that is as follows:

Holle Organic Baby Spelt Biscuit

Holle Organic Baby Spelt Biscuit

So, What Do These Figures Mean?

On the face of it, the Holle biscuits could be seen as a high fat, high sugar snack. But the issue really is not as simple as this and we need to put these figures into context.

Entirely breastfed infants take more than 50% of their energy from fat, since mother’s milk is very rich in fat. The fat composition of a mother’s milk is special – about 52% of the fats are saturated fatty acids. Breastfed babies are not in danger of having a raised cholesterol level or even at risk of cardiovascular diseases.

Following this natural ideal of mother’s milk, is the reason why Holle infant formulas and some other infant products are also rich in fat as well as being rich in saturated fatty acids. It is also recommended to enrich nearly fat free infant foods, such as vegetable and fruit meals as well as milk free grain based meals, with small amounts of oil or butter.

The Holle Organic Baby Spelt Biscuits contain pure butter from biodynamically raised cows as a fat source. Butter has a spectrum of fatty acids similar to a mother’s milk fat, and contains very easily digestible short and medium chain fatty acids. Butter in infant nutrition is not a bad ingredient – It is easily digested and has the right fat composition.

As for the sources of sugar, Holle uses only molasses of rice and banana as mild natural sweeteners in their baby biscuits. This way they avoid the need for processed, crystallised sugars that have been stripped of essential micro-nutrients.

Consider Your Baby’s Overall Diet

It is important to consider a baby’s overall daily diet. Babies from six months are either breastfed or having a baby milk or formula and are generally weaning. Such snacks as the baby biscuits or the baby rusks should be seen by parents as one part of this increasingly varied food mix.  A weaning baby that is fed on Holle organic baby foods will receive a diet that is well balanced and is nutritionally based on the developmental needs of infants of this age.

Of course, if parents choose to feed their baby excessive amounts of any one food the nutritional intake of the baby may become unbalanced. As with so much in parenting, we need to listen to our intuition and tune ino our baby’s needs.

Ulula Recommends

As usual, I recommend you use your common sense when thinking about the issues raised. Carry on feeding and weaning your baby according to your existing plan and let your common sense guide you as to how you supplement that with both the rusks and biscuits.

Organic Finger Foods – A Junk Free Concept?

By Sabine on 27 April 2009

At Ulula we believe finger foods and snacks for weaning babies should be not just tasty and fun but also healthy, wholesome treats that help children develop a taste for and love of good food.

It goes without saying that parents play a vital role in educating their children, and that in the first years before a child starts ‘formal education’ much of their learning for their life ahead has already taken place. Nowhere is this probably more true than with our childrens attitudes towards food. Babies learn what good food is only if we feed them good food.

On a recent shopping expedition Roger and I were amazed to see a baby that could not have been older than nine months being fed what looked like a bag of crisps. When we looked closer we could see that what the baby was eating were not crisps as such but rather a pack of  ‘finger foods for babies’. We were so shocked that we went out and bought ourselves several packets from the nearest branch of a well known high street chemist chain to investigate further.

Looking closer at the packets we bought we could see that the ingredients in these crisp-like baby snacks were actually not too bad at all – they were organic and there certainly was no junk.

However, the actual snacks themselves looked just like certain well known crisps varieties and were in packaging that can only be described as looking like crisp packets. They even tasted like milder versions of crisp varieties.

Is this really what we want to be feeding our young babies when they are weaning? Britain already eats more than half of all the crisps and similar savoury snacks eaten in the whole of Europe and is set by the year 2020 for a fifth of all boys and a third of all girls to be clinically obese. We are not saying that these weaning snacks for babies are to blame for this, but we must question whether encouraging our children to eat such things at such an early time in their life really educates them as to what is really good, wholesome food.

The ingredients in these crisps for babies may not contain junk – but this is certainly a junk concept.

Of course, Ulula sells organic finger foods and snacks for babies and growing children (both sweet and savoury), that we source from hand picked companies that we believe take the care to make products that are not only tasty but also wholesome. There are also other companies out there that also sell good quality finger foods and snacks for babies. I guess, the challenge for us as parents is how to choose snacks and treats for our babies that will help them develop a taste for good food that will stand them in good stead for the rest of their lives.

What are your experiences of feeding your baby finger foods and snacks? What useful hints can you share with other parents?

How is Demeter Baby Food Different?

By Sabine on 25 April 2009

Demeter quality symbol

Demeter quality assurance symbol

Ulula only stocks baby foods and foods for growing children and their families that are certified organic. Without exception. The organic certification guarantees certain minimum levels of standards in food production, such as high animal welfare standards and not allowing ‘chemical nasties’ to be used.

Many of our baby foods also carry the Demeter label (much of the Holle organic baby food range does so, for example) which is an additional certification that guarantees even higher quality levels in growing and processing foods. Only products which meet the stringent and far reaching quality of certified biodynamic farming, can carry the Demeter label.

You Can’t Get More Organic Than Biodynamic/Demeter

Biodynamic agriculture is a comprehensive approach to farming established in the 1920s by Dr Rudolf Steiner. Demeter standards not only exclude the use of synthetic fertilisers and other chemicals in food production and artificial additives during processing, but also require very specific measures such as applying herbal preparations to the land to strengthen the life processes in soil and food.

The Demeter farmer makes allowances for the specific peculiarities and needs of individual plant types and animal species. Biodynamic agriculture views a farm as a living organism with its own natural cycle – a consequence of this is that each biodynamic farm will only raise the number of animals that the farm land can naturally support. There is no intensive farming in biodynamic agriculture and there is a high degree of traceability in biodynamic farming that cannot be equalled.

Couple this with gentle food processing methods that respect and work with the raw ingredients and the result is a baby food that not only has the best possible pedigree but tastes simply delicious. It is quite simply the best possible start for your baby.

Let us know what you think? Is buying Demeter/biodynamic baby food important to you, and if so why? Can you taste the difference?

Organic Baby Food in Plastic Pouches

By Roger on 21 April 2009

The Ulula team were struck at the recent Organic and Natural Products exhibition at Olympia by the increasing number of baby food manufacturers that are offering their products in those little plastic pouches. I’m sure you’ve seen them, they’re a small wallet size plastic pouch with a tube that the baby sucks the food out from. And did I mention that they’re made of plastic? Plastic that can’t be recycled and takes hundreds of years to decompose? Yuck!

It seems from my discussions with prominent members of the baby food trade that even more manufacturers are developing products that use plastic pouches as a ‘delivery system’. I was very pleased to have received firm reassurances from Holle that they do not intend to introduce them – now or in the future.

I have several concerns about these pouches. Firstly, I think I may already have mentioned that they are made of plastic. Plastic may be ‘modern’ but it  is a hideously environmentally unfriendly petrochemical based material whose use should be minimised.

Baby food in glass jars may be ‘old fashioned’ but both the metal lids and the glass jars themselves can be readily recycled. Holle tells me that they would like to sterilise and reuse their jars (like milk bottles) but are prevented from doing so by strict regulations governing hygiene and baby food packaging.

My second major concern with these baby food pouches concerns the messages that they give to our children about food. When your little one wants a quick snack what do you do with these things? Twist off the cap, stick it in their mouth and let them suck away while you do something else. Notice anything missing in this ‘delivery system’? How about the rich mother/father and baby interaction that goes on when a parent feeds a baby? What a baby gains from that time together is invaluable.

It will also be interesting, in a terribly sad way, to see the impact of plastic pouches on the development of eating skills such as chewing and hand to mouth co-ordinaton.

And of course, these awful pouches are completely opaque – children never see the food they are eating. Aren’t modern children already so poorly ‘educated’ about food that large percentages of school starters don’t know where staples such as milk, bread and apples come from? These pouches seem to be taking this ignorance to the next level – who needs to know what an apple looks like when you can just suck it out of a plastic pouch with funny pictures on the front?

My disgust for these pouches is doubled when I see organic baby food being sold in them. It seems so contrary to the organic ethos of caring for both the environment and the person. Thank goodness some manufacturers, such as Holle, are resisting this shortsighted trend.

What do you think about this growing tendency to package baby food in plastic pouches? Do you give your baby food from these pouches, and what are the advantages for you? Do get in touch.

Allergy Aware (Baby) Foods

By Sabine on 19 April 2009

Allergies in our modern western societies seem to be ever on the increase and Ulula sells some fantastic organic food for babies and other family members that suffer from a variety of allergies.

But, we have to ask ourselves why allergies are on the increase. Is it a coincidence that they have increased inline with the growing industrialisation of our food production?

Shouldn’t we ask ourselves whether it is wiser to eat more locally grown food and not food which has been grown continents away in environments so different to our own? Shouldn’t we ask ourselves what impact highly processed and nutritionally empty foods have on our bodies over time? And what about the excessive breeding of grains to make them suitable for higher yields or resistant to certain diseases without thinking about the more holistic approach to living plants.

I believe we need to move to a food philosophy that respects and values nature. We take too much for granted and are ignorant of so much that nature offers us. We need food production methods that work with nature, not those that try to twist and pervert it to our own greedy ends.

I strongly believe that one way people pay for this approach is through allergies. I do not try to blame individuals who suffer from these often disabling conditions, but rather point the finger at these production methods that have developed over time and for which we all have a degree of blame. It is painful and hard for the people who have to live with allergies, our societies need to wake up and reverse this trend. What better place to start than with the food our babies eat?

 

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