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Authors: Jack Norris,Virginia Messina

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Vegan for Life (19 page)

BOOK: Vegan for Life
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MODIFIED FOOD GUIDE FOR PREGNANCY AND BREAST-FEEDING
These are minimum servings and should be used as a general guide. Some women will need more than this to support adequate weight gain.
Food group
Servings per day during pregnancy
Servings per day while breast-feeding
Grains and starchy vegetables
6–7
6–7
Legumes and soyfoods
5-6
6
Nuts
2
2
Vegetables
5
5
(include at least one leafy green vegetable)
Fruits
2
2
Fats
3
3
Calcium-rich foods
8
Supplements for pregnant vegans:
• A chewable or sublingual vitamin B
12
supplement. Follow the guidelines in Chapter 3. Don’t rely on a multivitamin supplement for this unless it is chewable.
• Prenatal supplement that provides folic acid, zinc, iron, and copper.
• A calcium supplement if you feel you are falling short of the 1,000 milligrams of calcium recommended during pregnancy.
• 300 milligrams of DHA from algae.
• 150 micrograms of iodine (which may already be included in your prenatal supplement).
• 600 to 1,000 IU vitamin D unless you are certain that you have adequate sun exposure.
Supplements for breastfeeding vegans:
• A chewable or sublingual vitamin B
12
supplement
• 300 milligrams of DHA
• 150 micrograms of iodine
SAMPLE MENUS
You may very well feel like cooking up a storm during and after your pregnancy. But just in case you don’t have the time or energy for much food prep, we’ve kept things simple with these sample menus. They are meant to illustrate the ease of planning healthy vegan menus without fuss. These menus utilize six mini-meals, which can be helpful with managing heartburn and nausea.
Sample Menu for Pregnancy
Breakfast
• 1 cup fortified breakfast cereal
• 1 cup fortified soymilk
• Banana
Snack
• ¼ cup almonds
• Raw vegetables
Lunch
• Miso soup with ½ cup tofu and 1 cup cooked kale or collards
• Serving of whole-grain crackers
Snack
• Whole-grain bread with ½ cup hummus
• ½ cup fortified orange juice
Dinner
• 1 cup brown rice
• ½ cup baked beans
• 1 cup steamed vegetables sautéed in 2 teaspoons canola oil
Snack
• ½ whole-grain English muffin with 2 tablespoons almond butter
• 1 cup fortified soymilk
Sample Menu for Breast-Feeding
Breakfast
• ½ cup scrambled tofu cooked in 1 teaspoon canola oil
• 1 slice whole-wheat toast with 1 teaspoon margarine
• 1 cup calcium-fortified orange juice
Snack
• ½ cup grapes
• Serving of whole-grain crackers with 2 tablespoons almond butter
Lunch
• Veggie burger
• Whole-wheat hamburger roll
• Slice tomato and lettuce
• Broccoli salad with ½ tablespoon vegan mayonnaise
Snack
• Small bran muffin
• 1 cup fortified soymilk
Dinner
• 1 cup lentil soup
• 1 cup steamed collards
• Green salad with dressing
• Whole-wheat dinner roll
• Snack
Smoothie
• ½ cup fortified soymilk
• ½ cup frozen fruit
• ¼ banana
• 1 teaspoon ground flaxseed
CHAPTER 10
RAISING VEGAN CHILDREN AND TEENS
INFANTS
Even the most confident vegan adults might feel a little nervous about a vegan diet for their newborn baby. Infants typically triple their weight in the first year of life and need enough nutritious food to see them through this early growth spurt. Can a vegan diet satisfy their needs?
During the first months of a baby’s life, this isn’t even an issue. All infants start out as vegetarians. Or, to be more correct, they begin their lives as “lactarians.” For the first four months or so, infants don’t need anything other than breast milk. It’s the perfect, complete food for a newborn. Unless they are given B
12
supplements (needed only if the mom’s diet is inadequate), the diets of vegan babies are exactly the same as infants in omnivore families until they are around seven months old.
The First Four Months
For the first four to six months of life, babies don’t need—and shouldn’t have—anything other than breast milk (or infant formula). They don’t need any solid foods during this time, and certain vegetables can be dangerous to very young infants.
Between the ages of four and six months, babies start to show that they are ready for solid foods. One sign of readiness is the ability to sit up and maintain balance. Another is the ability to use the tongue to move food to the back of the mouth for swallowing. Your pediatrician will help you decide when your baby is ready for solid foods, but all babies should start having some solid foods no later than six months of age.
1
First Solid Food Adventure: Cereal
“Solid” is a bit of an overstatement for the first non-milk foods a baby eats. They are more like thick liquids—fed from a spoon, not a bottle.
The first food for an infant is usually an iron-fortified infant rice cereal mixed with breast milk or infant formula. There isn’t anything wrong with other choices, but rice cereal is easily digested and unlikely to cause allergies. Once a baby is used to cereal and eating around ⅓ cup per day, begin to introduce mashed fruits and vegetables like applesauce, banana, pureed peaches or pears, strained white and sweet potatoes, carrots, green beans, and avocado.
During this period, breast milk or soy formula continues to play a major role in your baby’s diet and will be a part of the menu until at least the first birthday. Breast milk or infant formula is especially important for providing zinc, which can otherwise be low in a vegan infant’s diet. Even after your baby starts to consume solid foods, he or she needs either breast milk or a commercial infant formula. Regular soymilk should never be offered to babies before the first birthday because, like cow’s milk, it is a poor fit for an infant’s nutritional needs. Be sure to read “When Breast-Feeding Isn’t an Option” on page 147.
First Protein Foods
At around seven months, your baby will be ready to drink apple juice from a cup and explore protein-rich foods. This is when the diet of a baby in a vegan household starts to look a little bit different from that of other infants. First protein-rich foods for vegan infants include legumes
(cook them thoroughly and puree them), well-mashed tofu, and soy yogurt. This is a good time to start introducing vegetables with a stronger flavor like kale and collards. You can temper their flavors by pureeing them with bland or sweet foods like applesauce, tofu, or avocado.
Infants are usually ready for finger foods, like chunks of tofu or meat analogs, bread, and crackers, at ten months, and by the first birthday they can have nut butters or tahini spread thinly on crackers.
A few things to keep in mind for vegan babies:
• Talk to your pediatrician about supplements. Vitamin D is usually recommended for breast-fed infants in both vegan and omnivore families. Iron is sometimes recommended beginning at around four months, but that will depend on other foods in your baby’s diet. Breast-fed vegan infants need vitamin B
12
supplements only if the mother’s diet isn’t adequate. The table on page 146 shows suggested supplements for breast-fed vegan infants.
• When your baby is ready for solid foods, introduce them one at a time, offering one new food every three to four days. This makes it easy to identify any food allergies right away.
• Never give babies unpasteurized juice or cider, or any kind of corn syrup or honey, all of which can cause serious illness.
• Be careful not to overdo it with juices. Too much juice can displace other nutritious foods in a baby’s diet and can also cause diarrhea. Limit your infant to 6 ounces of juice per day and avoid juices with added sweeteners.
• Don’t give a baby any milk other than breast milk or infant formula before the first birthday. Regular soy, rice, hemp, and almond milks don’t have the right balance of nutrients for infants and shouldn’t be offered until your baby is a year old (these milks can, however, be used in small amounts in food preparation).
• Don’t offer foods that can cause choking like whole tofu hotdogs, popcorn, nuts, hard candies and grapes. Don’t offer infants nut and seed butters by the spoonful or spread too thickly on bread.
• Don’t salt or sweeten foods.
DAILY SUPPLEMENTS FOR BREAST-FED VEGAN BABIES
Nutrient
Birth to 6 months
6 to 12 months
Vitamin D
400 IU (10 micrograms)
400 IU (10 microgram)
Vitamin B
12
0.4 micrograms only if the mother doesn’t have a reliable B
12
intake
0.5 micrograms only if the mother doesn’t have a reliable B
12
intake
Iron
1 milligram per kilogram (0.45 milligrams per pound) of body weight beginning at four months
1 milligram per kilogram (0.45 milligrams per pound) of body weight unless infant is consuming sufficient iron from solid foods
Fluoride
0.25 milligrams if water contains less than 0.3 parts per million fluoride
Adapted from A. R. Mangels and V. Messina, “Considerations in Planning Vegan Diets: Infants,”
Journal of the American Dietetic Association
.
2
THE FIRST BIRTHDAY AND BEYOND: VEGAN TODDLERS
After the mad growth spurt and enthusiastic appetite of the first twelve months, things begin to slow down. Toddlers can have sluggish appetites, and children aren’t known for their adventurous eating habits at this stage. Picky and sometimes quirky eating behavior can make it difficult to get toddlers and preschoolers to eat anything at all, let alone to try new foods.
Full-fat fortified soymilk can be introduced to a baby on the first birthday. Avoid using other milks made from rice, almonds, hemp, coconut, or oats as the main beverage, since they are too low in protein (and calories) for young children. If your child is a slow grower or you aren’t certain that his or her diet is high enough in zinc, it might be wise to continue with either breast-feeding or soy infant formula for a while.
The food guide on page 149 and table of suggested supplements on page 159 will help you plan healthy meals for toddlers. Don’t worry if
your child doesn’t eat exactly this way every single day. Two or three days of nothing but peanut butter and banana sandwiches never hurt anyone—not even a three-year-old. And getting children to eat healthful foods like vegetables isn’t a vegan problem; it’s a universal problem for parents of young children.
When Breast-Feeding Isn’t an Option
For a number of reasons, breast milk is the optimal food for babies, and most vegans choose it for their newest family members. Breast milk provides a nutrient balance that is close to ideal for growing infants. It also contains unique immune factors and reduces the risk for allergies. Infants don’t need any food other than breast milk for the first four to six months of life, and ideally they should continue to receive it until at least the first birthday or preferably the second.
But sometimes breast-feeding isn’t an option. If you are unable to breast-feed or you need to decrease or stop nursing, soy infant formula supports normal growth and development in babies.
3
These formulas are not 100 percent vegan since they contain vitamin D derived from animals, but they are as close as we can get to a healthy vegan choice.
Infants should never be given homemade formulas and they should never be given regular soymilk. In the rare cases where vegan infants have suffered from malnutrition, it’s because they were being fed homemade formulas or did not receive adequate supplements of vitamin B
12
and vitamin D. Because babies have very specific nutritional needs, it’s essential to use only commercial infant formulas which are manufactured to meet those needs.
BOOK: Vegan for Life
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