It gives me great pleasure to cede the floor to guest-posterย Jenna Helwigย today.ย Jenna is the senior food editor at Parents Magazine and author ofย Baby-Led Feeding,ย an inspiring manual for raising good eaters and kickstarting the family meal habit nice and early. Yes, your baby can eat the salmon youโre looking at above. Read on for the recipe and for a fun little surprise. ย Take it away, Jenna.ย
You may wonder why this dinner party-worthy (but Tuesday night-easy) salmon dish is in a book called Baby-Led Feeding. This is baby food? Yes! And grown-up food and teenager food, kid food, and toddler food.
Baby-led feeding is my take on baby-led weaning, the increasingly popular method of introducing babies to solid foods. Instead of being spoon-fed purees, babies eat finger foods right from the start, grasping soft foods in their sweet, chubby little fingers. Baby-led feeding encourages babies to really get to know their food, to smell it, touch it, play with it, taste it, and yes, probably drop a lot of it on the floor (at least at first). It helps develop hand-eye coordination and teaches babies to recognize and rely on their own hunger cues.
But, my favorite part about baby-led feeding is that babies can take part in family meals from an earlier age, eating the same foods that their parents, caregivers, and siblings doโlike the family meals in Baby-Led Feeding such as Sweet Potato and Quinoa Burgers, Spiced Lamb Meatballs, Slow-Cooker Maple-Dijon Pork, or this Mother-in-Law Salmon.
My mother-in-law, Iolanda was born and raised in southern Italy. When she was 16, a man in her village 10 years her senior (my father-in-law!) chose her to be his wife. They had barely met when they were married. Soon after, they immigrated to Montreal, Canada. Within five years Iolanda had three sons. Iolanda didnโt have an easy life those first couple of decades, learning how to be the wife that her traditional husband expected, navigating a foreign culture, learning a new language, suffering through ridiculously frigid winters, and wrangling three rambunctious boys.
But, Iolanda survived and, in time, the best word I can think of, is bloomed. When I met her more than 15 years ago I discovered a petite, chic woman who was bursting with warmth and the center of a large group of devoted friends. She begins to sing at the table with the least provocation; it takes only a tiny bit more prompting to get her dancing. She is crazy for children and unfailingly generous, perhaps most of all with her endlessly delicious cooking. Her lasagna, with 15 layers of homemade pasta, is legendary. Her meatballs inspire moans of pleasure, and she can make simple blanched broccoli mouthwatering. (The secret is well-salted water and garlic, naturally.)
This salmon is a mainstay in Iolandaโs repertoire. Slathered in a Dijon mustard, lemon, olive oil, parsley, and garlic mixture with a dollop of mayo for creaminess, the fish simply bakes in the oven. It really is dead easy. My mother-in-law prepares a side of salmon and then cuts it into pieces, but itโs faster (and more budget-friendly when youโre cooking for a smaller crowd) to start with individual filets.
GIVEAWAY ALERT! Iโm giving away a copy of Baby-Led Feedingย to two lucky readers โ just leave a comment to be eligible. Contest ends Thursday, March 15 at noon ET. Good luck! UPDATE: The winners have been notified. Thank you for playing!
For more Jenna, follow her on Instagram or, for baby and toddler ideas, here.ย
Mother-in-Law Salmon
Like many instinctive cooks, Iolanda isnโt much for measuring, so even though Iโve eaten this delicious salmon dish countless times it took me a few tries to nail the proportionsโexperimentation that was well worth it.ย ย Note: If your salmon still has the skin on it, no problem. Once the fish is cooked you can lift the fillets up off the skin easily with a spatula, leaving the skin behind on the baking pan.ย Makes 3-4 servings
1 pound salmon, cut into 3 or 4 fillets
1/4 teaspoon salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 tablespoon mayonnaise
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
2 garlic cloves, minced
Preheat the oven to 375ยฐF. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
Place the salmon fillets on the parchment. Sprinkle with the salt (except for babyโs portion) and pepper to taste.
In a small bowl, stir together the olive oil, mayonnaise, lemon juice, and mustard. Stir in the parsley and garlic.
Spoon the olive oil mixture over the salmon fillets. Roast the fish until it flakes easily in the center when tested with a fork or knife, 12 to 15 minutes, depending on the thickness. If youโre serving a baby, cool and flake the fish with a fork.
Mother-in-Law Salmon from Baby-Led Feeding by Jenna Helwig. ยฉ Copyright 2018 by Jenna Helwig. Used by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved. Photo by Lauren Volo.
Related: A Picky Eater Taxonomy (still one of my favorites)
This sounds delicious and I love the idea of baby led weaning! I would love to try that approach with our 2nd baby (due this May!), thank you for the inspiration AND the delicious recipe.
Tris looks delicious! Gonna try next week. My 1 year old will probably devour it, 4 year old probably wonโt touch it, and hubby and I will like it. So, majority wins
Iโm currently in the middle of Baby Led Weaning with my 9 month old. I also did it with his 3 year old sister and she is still an amazing eater. I know a lot of parenting is luck but I like to think that the BLW helped at least a little ๐
I would love this book!
I did mostly baby-led weaning with my first baby, and I canโt wait to start again with the next. I could use some new recipes!
My 9-month-old has not been interested in purees, but BLW has intimidated me. Would be interested in checking out this book to learn how we might prepare our family meals (we also have a 4-year-old) in a baby-friendly way.
Would love this book to learn more about baby led weaning for my 3 month old.
Our 4.5 month old is on the solids horizon. Iโm so excited to share this discovery phase with her! So far, avocado has been fun. ๐
I just started baby-led-feeding my son a couple weeks ago, and he loves it! I would love to use this book to feed him more interesting food and raise a little foodie ๐
This recipe looks great! I would love this book for ideas for my daughterโฆshe is 9 weeks so we still have some time before we start feeding her real food ๐
Love this! Coincidentally, my daughter is having her first meal tonight! I love the idea of a cookbook, BLW is daunting!!
Love the whole concept!!
Iโve got an almost 6 month old and have been researching baby led weaning and this book would be perfect!
I love this concept for baby food! We are raising our first little one, and she is almost 3 months old. Iโd love a copy of your book to know more about how to teach her healthy habits and be a part of family dinners!
Just getting ready to start my six month old on food โ this book would be perfect!
Perfect timing! Weโre starting to research baby led weaning as our 4 month old daughter prepares to start solids in a few months. Canโt wait to get my hands on a copy of this!
Iโve got 6 month old twins and Iโm very interested in this book.
I am about to start feeding my baby real food and this idea of baby led feeding is fascinating. Plus it sounds like it saves money (no baby food)! I would love a copy of this book!
We did baby led weaning partly with my daughter but I would love to read more to feel more prepared for the next baby. Even partly, however, I feel like sheโs a really decent eater still now at 2.
Yum! Looks so good!
This looks delicious! Iโd love to learn more about baby led feeding for our first baby on the way!
With 4 school-aged kiddos and a baby on the way, Iโd love a book with insights on meals we all can eat together and enjoy!
Learning to cook for my family really took off as a newly minted stay at home mom trying to keep herself sane at home with a new baby. One of my first great successes was white fish with fresh orange juice and herbs. It was a marvel to me that all three of us on the family could enjoy the same simple delicious meal and became my standard for family dinners thereafter. A decade and three more babies later, feeding tender, flakey fish to my newest eaters still takes me back to that revelatory dinner.
I started my son on purรฉes and eventually moved to finger foods, still earlier than most people I knew but not right from the start. Now my daughter is 5 months and Iโd love the guidance on doing it from the start! Also, we will be making this salmon for dinner tomorrow, it looks delicious and we always have those ingredients!
This looks awesome! Trying this tomorrow!