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Blueberry

Usually introduced around 6 months

Choking risk2 key nutrients

Choking notes

A whole blueberry is a small round shape that can slip down and block a small airway. Squish, quarter, or halve each berry for younger babies and choose soft, ripe ones. Always supervise.

How to serve by age

6-9 months

Prep:

A whole blueberry is a small round shape, so do not serve it whole. Squish each berry between your fingers until it bursts, or cut it into quarters. Mashed blueberry stirred into yogurt, oatmeal, or another purée works well too. Choose soft, ripe berries.

Cut:

Squished until it bursts, quartered, or mashed; never whole.

9-12 months

Prep:

As the pincer grasp develops, offer quartered or halved blueberries. A whole berry is still a round shape that can slip down, so keep cutting each one and check that it is soft. Bursting them by hand stays a quick, safe option.

Cut:

Quartered or halved; never a whole round berry.

12-18 months

Prep:

Offer halved blueberries. A whole berry can still slip down round, so halve them and keep watching, especially firmer ones. Whole blueberries become easier once the toddler chews reliably, but halving stays the safer choice for now.

Cut:

Halved; cut firmer ones down.

Key nutrients

FiberVitamin C

Common questions

When can my baby eat Blueberry?

Most babies can try Blueberry from around 6 months, once they show signs of readiness. Check the prep and cut-size notes above before you start.

General informational content, not medical advice. Always consult your pediatrician about introducing new foods, especially if your baby has any medical conditions or family history of allergies.

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