Solids for Babies

Baby food recipe

Peas baby food recipe

Suitable with prep

Cooked peas can fit after solids start when they are soft and flattened or mashed for early eaters.

A good candidate when baby is ready and the texture is adjusted.

Recipe-making flow

1 Confirm readiness

Cooked peas can fit after solids start when they are soft and flattened or mashed for early eaters.

2 Prepare the ingredient

Cook until soft, mash with a little moisture, and serve on a preloaded spoon.

3 Choose the texture

Mashed peas, pea puree, or soft flattened peas for babies with more oral skills.

4 Serve small

Cook until soft, mash with a little moisture, and serve on a preloaded spoon.

Texture options by serving style

Smooth puree

Blend or mash peas into a thick, smooth spoon texture. Thin only enough that it still moves slowly from the spoon.

Mashed

Mash peas with a fork and keep the mixture moist, with only soft lumps baby can manage.

Finger food or BLW

Mash or flatten individual peas; avoid loose whole round peas for beginners. Check that the piece is soft enough to mash with gentle finger pressure before serving.

If the food feels firm, dry, sticky, chewy, or round enough to lodge in the airway, change the texture or choose the safer alternative.

Texture, shape, and safety

Texture

Mashed peas, pea puree, or soft flattened peas for babies with more oral skills.

Shape

Mash or flatten individual peas; avoid loose whole round peas for beginners.

Choking watch

Whole peas are small and round, so flattening or mashing reduces the shape risk.

Allergen note

Peas are legumes. They are not a top major allergen, but individual reactions are possible.

Batching and storage safety

Fridge portions

Cool quickly, portion into clean covered containers, and refrigerate promptly. For lower-risk fruit, vegetable, grain, or legume prep, use refrigerated homemade baby food within 48 hours as a conservative planning rule.

Freezer portions

Freeze small portions in clean trays or containers, label the food and date, and thaw in the refrigerator or under cold running water before reheating or serving.

Bowl leftovers

Do not save food that has touched baby's spoon, mouth, or bowl. Saliva can introduce bacteria, so discard bowl leftovers instead of returning them to the fridge.

Clean prep

Wash hands, use clean utensils and surfaces, and keep prepared baby food covered until serving.

Recipe safety note

Peas are legumes. They are not a top major allergen, but individual reactions are possible.

Do not add honey for babies under 12 months. Keep added salt and sugar limited, and avoid saving food that has touched baby's spoon or mouth.

If the recipe is not working

  • Too thick: loosen with breast milk, formula, water, plain yogurt, or another appropriate soft food.
  • Too dry: add moisture before serving. Dry crumbs or flakes can be hard for babies to manage.
  • Too slippery: offer a larger graspable piece, mash it, or roll soft pieces in finely ground oats if appropriate.
  • Risk note: Whole peas are small and round, so flattening or mashing reduces the shape risk.

Safer alternative: Mashed lentils, squash, or sweet potato can offer similar spoonable textures.

What to do next

Cook until soft, mash with a little moisture, and serve on a preloaded spoon.

Safer alternative: Mashed lentils, squash, or sweet potato can offer similar spoonable textures.

Sources reviewed