Orange Dreamsicle Gut Gummies

Foods with collagen/gelatin promote digestive tract healing and are gentle and easy to digest. Bone broth has made collagen famous as a food, but for additional supplementation, collagen and gelatin powders are a quick and easy way to get this superfood into your gut. Gelatin has a long list of healing benefits for diseases such as colitis, chron’s, and peptic ulcers. It’s also high in  amino acids, particularly glycine, that is a supportive protein during pregnancy and beneficial to joint mobility.

Note that gelatin powder and collagen powder are NOT the same, and collagen powder will not work in this recipe. Gelatin is used as a thickening agent and is derived from collagen. All gelatin is collagen, but not all collagen is gelatin. I use Great Lakes hydrolyzed grass-fed beef gelatin for this recipe, however there are a number of high-quality gelatin powders on the market today.

Unlike the electric red Jello jigglers you grew up on, these gelatin gummies contain an abundance of nourishing vitamins that you can dial up or down in this recipe depending on your nutritional needs.   Since these immune-boosting gut gummies are the ultimate in kid-friendly finger food, here are the supplements I have used to mix-and-match within my gummies.

Please note, in no way am I’m suggesting you use all of these at once; this is simply a guideline for some of the possibilities and options that you might consider and ones that have complimented the taste and flavor of this recipe! What you choose is up to you!

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  • Innate Naturals Vitamin C Complete powder
  • NFH Children’s Multi SAP Powder (tropical punch)
  • Truly Natural Vitamin C Powder
  • Klaire Labs Ther-biotic Complete Powder
  • Genestra HMF Probiotic Powder

To know how much of these powdered supplements to add in your gut gummy recipe, follow the serving size on the label, and add between 2-4 servings of each. For example, if one serving of probiotic powder is 1/4 of a teaspoon, dissolve between 1/2 to 1 teaspoon of the powder into the cooled liquid.

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Orange Dreamsicle Gut Gummies

  • Difficulty: Easy
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Ingredients

Orange Dreamsicle Gut Gummies

  • 1 1/2 cups orange juice
  • ½ cup full fat coconut milk
  • 3 heaping TBSP grass-fed, unflavored gelatin
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla

Optional Superfood Add-Ins:

  • Vitamin C powder
  • Children’s multi-vitamin powder
  • Probiotic powder
  • Ginger or turmeric

Directions

In a small saucepan, warm orange juice and coconut milk until heated through, but not boiling. Whisk in gelatin one tablespoon at a time, whisking constantly to make sure no clumps have formed before adding the next. Once gelatin is completely dissolved, add in vanilla and set aside to cool.

Once the gelatin has cooled to room temperature, add in your preferred superfoods, stirring until completely dissolved. It’s especially imperative that the gelatin has cooled before adding vitamin C or probiotics, as heat can damage both of these.

Pour gelatin liquid into candy molds or a glass baking dish before refrigerating. Refrigerate for around one hour or until completely set.

Photos and Content Copyright © Jaclyn Beaty Nutrition, 2021


Liver and Pears

High quality organ meats are one of the best foods to introduce to babies starting around 6 months. Chicken liver and beef liver purees were at the top of the list as my babies’ first foods. Now that my babies have sprouted toddler tastebuds, I’ve adapted the to include the sweetness of chunky, juicy pears. This is also an incredible way to introduce organ meats to someone who has never had them. The amount of sweetness is easily modifiable by adjusting the amount of pears you add.

Click to view my Babyfood Liver Pate recipe perfect for first foods starting at 6 months.

For more on why this is a perfect first food, read my article on 6-9 month feeding practices.

Chicken liver’s nutrient density wins in nearly every category but tops the charts for iron, zinc, and choline. It’s the most nutrient dense food your baby could eat, second to mother’s milk. Pears add a healthy dose of fiber along with vitamin C, which boosts the amount of iron that’s absorbed from liver…a true pair.

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I like to save a small jar in the refrigerator for immediate use, and then freeze the rest into mini-muffin molds and freeze along with the rest of my baby food stash.

Liver and Pears

  • Servings: 16, one ounce servings
  • Difficulty: Easy
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Ingredients

Liver and Pears

  • 1 lb high quality organic, free-range chicken livers
  • 1/4 cup bone broth, chicken broth, or water
  • 1 ripe organic pear, cut into chunks, divided (I prefer d-Anjou or Bartlett pears)

Directions

In a small saucepan, bring livers, broth, and HALF the pear chunks to boil, then reduce to simmer for 14-16 minutes, stirring occasionally. The juices from the pears will begin to seep and help add liquid and sweetness to the livers. Use an instant read thermometer to check the internal temp of the liver has reached 165 F. Transfer livers and pears to high-speed blender, and puree until creamy, whipped consistency is achieved. 

Scrape liver mixture into a medium bowl and mix in the remaining pear chunks so there are visible pear pieces within the liver pate. Reserve a single serving of liver and pears to use within 1-2 days, or transfer the remaining into silicone sections or muffin tins and freeze in small portions until ready to use.

Photos and Content Copyright © Jaclyn Beaty Nutrition, 2020


Baby Feeding Practices for 6-9 Months

A baby’s palate is a blank slate at birth and taste buds and preferences are developed by exposure. Introducing a deep and wide variety of nutrient dense foods early and often will help shape taste buds and set a firm foundation for good health. I cringe every time I hear the phrase “food before one is just for fun.” I couldn’t disagree more. Food before age one sets the stage for a strong immunity, academic success, and physical strength. Here are some of my feeding practices I value for the sensitive period of time within the 6-9 month window:

1. Nutrient Density at the Forefront

Introduce solids with the most nutritiously-dense foods. Shocker; that’s not refined white rice cereal! This study of US babies by Dr. Nancy Krebs shows babies fed meat as first foods grew faster and showed fewer nutrient deficiencies than babies who started on rice. Rice cereal has traditionally been recommended as a first food because it’s fortified with synthetic iron, a poorly absorbed form that can also cause constipation.  Furthermore, babies don’t have sufficient pancreatic amylase, the enzyme needed to digest starch until around 2 years of age. Any starches consumed would be digested from small amounts of salivary amylase in the mouth, but what remains passes through the GI system undigested, where an underdeveloped gut lining remains leaky until 12-18 months until closure occurs.  This leaky gut, nothing short of brilliant design, allows antibodies from mother’s milk to pass into the blood stream and develop the immune system. Rice has also been making the headlines for containing arsenic, causing unnecessary burden on little bodies. Human milk is the perfect food to sustain life for 6 months, and the second food should be equally as superior in nutrition, and that’s why I chose bone broth and organic chicken liver as super-star starters. This article from the Weston A. Price foundation says liver contains more nutrients, gram for gram, than any other food. Now THAT’S the nutrient density I’m talking about!  Liver offers heme iron, which is a much more bio available form, along with vitamin A, choline, and zinc that are vital to a baby’s growth. I started with 3 days of spoon-fed bone broth liquid before including pureed chicken liver + bone broth. Quality and source are critical when it comes to selecting livers. I find grass fed organic liver at our local health food store and also the farmer’s market. I have offered both chicken and beef liver, and while both are nutrition superstars, chicken liver has a slight edge because of its milder taste and higher iron content. If cooking liver is new to you, follow my easy recipe for pureed chicken liver.

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2. Nutritional Diversity from Vegetables

There are so many different vegetables waiting to be introduced that I have easily been able to offer a diverse variety of veggies without getting stuck on repeat or offering fruit. I plan to introduce fruit closer to 9-12 months and will avoid straight-up fruit purees. Palates can begin to favor a preference for sweet foods so quickly, and it’s often a fight to retrain them. Savory and bitter foods early help develop a preference for these foods as they grow.

Below is a spectrum of color, and also spectrum of nutrition for great first foods. These are easily pureed and frozen into mini-muffin tins for later use. Both of my babies have been big eaters and it’s not unusual to go through 3-4 of these discs a day at this age. This stash disappears in a hurry!

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3. Don’t Fear the Fat

Babies are born with about 15% body fat and it continues to pack on until around 9 months when it plateaus at around 25% fat. There’s a reason. Around 50-60% of a baby’s energy expenditure gets burned up in a quickly developing brain. Fat stores on the body help supply the brain with the nutrition it needs to learn at an escalating rate.  There’s a reason breastmilk is considered whole milk and is the greatest source of DHA known to man! I vary the following fats into veggie purees to also help absorb the baby-loving fat soluble vitamins A, D, and K. (Note: 1/4 teaspoon Cod Liver Oil and 1 teaspoon of Pumpkin Seed Oil are given consistently at bedtime each night along with a baby probiotic)

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Pictured left to right:

  • Flax oil
  • Unrefined cold-pressed virgin coconut oil
  • Pumpkin seed oil
  • Ghee
  • Cod liver oil
  • Organic Peanut Butter*

*This is a controversial debate, but one I feel strongly about introducing early and often to avoid potential peanut allergies. The AAP recently changed their stance on this too, recommending peanut butter as early as 4-6 months (more on that here).

Other foods not mentioned above that are offered regularly are:

  • Soft boiled free-range egg yolk. Quality matters with everything, but I’m especially conscious when it comes to eggs. Free-range organic eggs are best. Egg yolk is the best food source of Choline, a vital nutrient for brain and immunity development at this age. Egg whites are more allergenic, so try to avoid getting any white fragments in the mix. I fry eggs in ghee and spoon-feed the yolk.
  • Sauerkraut juice. This is so rich in vitamin C and probiotics- the perfect immune booster!
  • Hummus. Single serving store bought hummus cups are a super easy grab-and-go food. This is a much healthier on-the-go option than the squeeze snack pouches that are filled with pasteurized produce mush usually older than the kids.
  • Mashed avocado. This is not something that I keep in my frozen stash because it’s so easy to mash fresh when I’m making avocado toast for my older kiddo.
  • Spices! Don’t be shy on the flavor. You don’t like bland food- why would your baby?

Remember to introduce foods slowly, waiting 3-4 days at a time before introducing new foods to monitor for allergic reactions.


Babyfood Liver Pate

High quality organ meats are one of the best foods to introduce to babies starting around 6 months. I have introduced chicken liver and beef liver pate to my babe as first foods, and aim to offer this around 3-4 servings a week for adequate iron, choline, and zinc.

For more on why this is a perfect first food, read my article on 6-9 month feeding practices.

If you cringe at the word ‘liver’ or it isn’t something that has ever passed your lips, don’t mistake that for meaning your baby won’t like it either. When pureed with chicken broth or bone broth, it’s the most nutrient dense food your baby could eat, second to mother’s milk.

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I like to save a small jar in the refrigerator for immediate use, and then freeze the rest into mini-muffin molds and freeze along with the rest of my baby food stash.

Babyfood Liver Pate

  • Servings: 16, one ounce servings
  • Difficulty: Easy
  • Print

Ingredients

Babyfood Liver Pate

  • 1 lb high quality organic, free-range chicken livers
  • 1/2 cup bone broth, chicken broth, or water
  • pinch of sea salt

Directions

In a small saucepan, bring livers and broth to boil, then reduce to simmer for 14-16 minutes, stirring occasionally. I use an instant read thermometer to check the internal temp of the liver has reached 165 F. Transfer livers and broth to high-speed blender, add salt if desired, and puree until creamy, whipped consistency is achieved. 

Reserve a single serving of liver pate to use within 1-2 days, and transfer the remaining into silicone sections or muffin tins and freeze in small portions until ready to use.

Photos and Content Copyright © Jaclyn Beaty Nutrition, 2019