Biscuits are ready-to-eat, baked snacks commonly made with leavened or unleavened flour, fat, sugar, and salts. They can also have other ingredients, such as milk, egg, nuts, seeds, and dried fruits.
Based on these ingredients and shapes or sizes, commercial biscuits have a wide product range. Parents often consider commercial biscuits an easy snacking choice for babies due to their easy availability and affordability. But are packaged biscuits safe for babies?
This post answers your query about biscuit’s safety, reasons to avoid commercial biscuits, and their healthy alternative.
Can Babies Eat Biscuits?
According to the NHS, parents should avoid feeding packaged baby snacks, such as biscuits, to their babies, due to the product’s high (1) (2). Instead, it is advisable to develop a habit of feeding healthy foods, such as fresh fruits and vegetables, to babies.
However, for functional reasons, such as teething, babies older than six months can consume low-sodium, unsweetened teething biscuits (13) (4). Teething biscuits might help reduce teething pain by allowing your baby to chew on to a firm surface (5).
Why Should Babies Avoid Eating Store-Bought Biscuits?
Store-bought, packaged biscuits are considered unhealthy for babies as they usually contain:
- Refined flour: Most commercial biscuits contain refined wheat flour (maida), which has little or no fiber and it lacks micronutrients, such as vitamin B and iron (6) (7). Lack of fiber makes digestion of flour tough on an infant’s immature digestive system. Besides, its consumption may lead to constipation if the baby does not consume a well-balanced diet (8).
- Refined sugar: Babies younger than 24 months should avoid foods with added sugar (9). Refined sugar or white sugar has zero nutritional value as it has no nutrients and fiber. Its overconsumption can pose the risk of health issues, such as childhood obesity and tooth decay (10).
- Salt: Babies younger than 12 months require less than one gram (less than 0.4g sodium) of salt a day (11). The baby can get this sodium from breast milk or formula milk and other solids they might be eating. Thus, feeding packaged biscuits could lead to overconsumption of sodium that may affect an infant’s long-term health.
- Trans fats: Trans fats are a type of dietary fats that form when vegetable oils are hydrogenated (12). They are known to raise the levels of LDL cholesterol (bad cholesterol) and decrease HDL cholesterol (good cholesterol). Over a period, trans fats consumption may trigger health issues, such as heart diseases (13) (14).
- Emulsifiers: An emulsifier stabilizes the fat and water emulsion in biscuits. It may be considered a minor additive, but recent studies show that emulsifiers may alter gut microbiota and cause digestive health issues (15) (16).
- Other synthetics: Raising agents, dough conditioners, flavors, artificial colors, and preservatives are some synthetic substances that biscuits may contain. These substances could be harsh on your little one’s gastrointestinal system.
- Hidden allergens: Biscuits may contain hidden allergens, such as milk solids, soy, and peanut, which may trigger an allergic reaction or cause intolerance in susceptible babies. Identifying these allergens by reading the labels may not always be possible since some manufacturers may not mention these ingredients.
Although not all store-bought biscuits contain unhealthy ingredients, it may not always be possible to tell if they are inappropriate for the baby’s health. Thus, it is better to avoid commercial, packaged biscuits for babies.
Which Biscuits Are Suitable For Babies?
Unsweetened homemade biscuits consisting of healthy ingredients, such as whole grains, millets, pulses, fruits, nuts, and seeds, are suitable for babies. Homemade biscuits should be fed to the baby in moderation. They should not replace healthy foods, such as breast milk or formula milk, cereals, soups, purees, and porridges.
Homemade Biscuit Recipes For Babies And Toddlers
Here are some tasty and healthy homemade biscuit recipes that you can try for your baby.
1. Whole-wheat biscuits
You will need:
- 1 cup whole-wheat flour
- 1tsp baking powder
- ½ cup ghee (melted)
- ½ cup jaggery powder
- ¼ tsp cardamom powder
- 2tbsp milk
- 1tbsp dry fruit powder
- 1tsp cumin seeds
How to:
- Preheat the oven to 338°F (170°C). Grease the baking tray with some ghee and set aside.
- Sieve wheat flour and baking powder together with a fine-mesh sieve.
- Add ghee, cumin seeds, and dry fruit powder to the whole-wheat flour mix. Mix well using a fork until the mixture turns into a crumble.
- Add jaggery powder and cardamom powder. Mix well.
- Add milk while rolling the wheat flour mix with your fingers. Make a lump-free, smooth dough. Refrigerate the dough for 20 minutes.
- Divide the dough into small balls and flatten each ball with your palm to shape them into a biscuit.
- Place all the biscuits into the baking tray and bake them for 20 minutes or until biscuits start browning on the edges.
- Once done, remove the tray from the oven, and set aside to allow the biscuit to come to room temperature.
- Store the biscuits in an airtight container in the refrigerator. Consume within two weeks.
2. Oats biscuit
You will need:
- 75g whole-wheat flour
- 75g rolled oats
- 75g ghee
- 50g jaggery powder
- 2tbsp milk
- 2tbsp almonds, cashew, and walnuts (finely chopped)
- 1tsp baking powder
How to:
- Preheat the oven to 356°F (180°C). Line a baking tray with parchment paper and set aside.
- Sift the whole-wheat flour into a bowl and add baking powder, oats, and jaggery
- Heat milk and ghee in a saucepan over low heat for five minutes.
- Add milk and ghee to the dry ingredients and mix everything thoroughly.
- Spoon the mixture onto the baking tray and shape them using the spoon’s back. Leave space between biscuits to provide free space to rise and spread.
- Once done, put the tray into the oven and bake for 15 minutes or until the biscuits turn golden brown.
- After 15 minutes, take out the tray from the oven and leave aside for the biscuits to cool.
- Store the biscuits in an airtight container in the refrigerator. Consume within two weeks.
3. Ragi biscuits
You will need:
- 4 cups ragi flour
- 2 cups ghee
- 1½ cup jaggery powder
- 2tsp baking soda
- 2tbsp cardamom powder
- 2tbsp dry fruit powder
- 2tbsp sesame seeds (roasted)
How to:
- Preheat the oven to 320°F (160°C). Grease the baking tray using a small amount of ghee.
- Put a pan on low flame and dry roast ragi flour with constant stirring until you get the aroma of the flour.
- Switch off the flame. Add ghee, dry fruit powder, sesame seeds, cardamom powder, jaggery, and baking soda into the pan. Mix well until you get smooth, lump-free dough.
- Make small balls by rolling the dough softly between your palms and place them on the baking tray. Flatten the balls by pressing them with the back of a spoon.
- Place the baking tray into the oven and bake the biscuits for about 20 minutes.
- After 20 minutes, take out the tray from the oven and set aside to cool.
- Transfer the biscuits into an airtight container and store in the refrigerator for up to a week.
Commercial biscuits are a quick snack for adults but feeding them to babies is inadvisable. You can prepare healthy biscuits at home by altering the ingredients, such as flour, sugar, and salt. Make small quantities as homemade biscuits without preservatives have a short shelf life. Store them properly and feed them to your baby occasionally.