Solids for Babies

How to serve

How to serve Peanut Butter for baby

Use caution

Many babies can try peanut after solids start, but never as a thick sticky spoonful.

Prep, allergy context, or texture matters before serving.

At a glance

Age signal

Many babies can try peanut after solids start, but never as a thick sticky spoonful.

Direct answer

Many babies can try peanut after solids start, but never as a thick sticky spoonful.

Texture

Thinned smooth peanut butter mixed into puree, yogurt, oatmeal, or warm water.

Risk watch

Thick nut butter is sticky and can be a choking risk.

Step-by-step serving method

  1. Start with readiness: Many babies can try peanut after solids start, but never as a thick sticky spoonful.
  2. Set the texture: Thinned smooth peanut butter mixed into puree, yogurt, oatmeal, or warm water.
  3. Change the shape: No globs. Spread very thinly or stir until fully loosened.
  4. Watch the risk: Thick nut butter is sticky and can be a choking risk.
  5. Have a fallback: Offer smooth, thinned sunflower seed butter only if appropriate for your family and clinician guidance.

Texture, shape, and safety

Texture

Thinned smooth peanut butter mixed into puree, yogurt, oatmeal, or warm water.

Shape

No globs. Spread very thinly or stir until fully loosened.

Choking watch

Thick nut butter is sticky and can be a choking risk.

Allergen note

Peanut is a common allergen. Ask a pediatric clinician first for severe eczema, egg allergy, or prior reactions.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Serving before baby shows readiness signs or while baby is reclined.
  • Leaving round, hard, slippery, sticky, or chewy shapes unchanged.
  • Adding honey for babies under 12 months or relying on added salt and sugar.
  • Trying a common allergen for the first time when baby is unwell, rushed, or not supervised.

What to do next

Use a small thinned amount and keep the texture loose enough to drip from a spoon.

Safer alternative: Offer smooth, thinned sunflower seed butter only if appropriate for your family and clinician guidance.

When to ask a pediatric clinician

Peanut is a common allergen. Ask a pediatric clinician first for severe eczema, egg allergy, or prior reactions.

Ask for individual guidance if baby has severe eczema, a known food allergy, prior reactions, swallowing concerns, poor growth, prematurity, or another medical condition that affects feeding.

Sources reviewed