Soon after Meenal Lele's first child was diagnosed with multiple food allergies, new research upended decades of allergy advice. The LEAP study found that consistently adding allergenic foods beginning at four months of age could drastically reduce the rate of developing food allergies. The American Academy of Pediatrics subsequently began recommending that parents give allergenic foods to their babies early and often.
As Meenal struggled to prepare allergens three times a week for her second child, she realized how hard it was to mix nuts into baby food without exposing his older brother or contaminating the blender. There had to be a better way! She took my background in chemical engineering and worked with food scientists to develop a solution.
Lil Mixins is specially prepared to blend smoothly into breastmilk, formula, or baby foods, so it’s simple to give to infants. They use the best quality ingredients and no additives or sweeteners – the same way you would make it yourself, but without the mess. And they've made it so one jar of each product will last from early infancy until your baby can start to eat whole foods.
Their goal is to make early introduction easier for busy moms.
 
Meet My Guest:

WEBSITE: LilMixins.com

INSTAGRAM: @LilMixins

TWITTER: @LilMixins

YOUTUBE: Lil Mixins

FACEBOOK: @LilMixins

MOM SENSE PROMO: Use the code momsense15 (all lowercase) for 15% off Lil Mixins Peanut Powder

Press:
HUFFPOST: Allergies Are Becoming More Frequent. Why?

Show Notes:

02:00 - Introduction

03:30 - Meenal's story

07:35 - The story behind Meenal's son's food allergy

10:00 - New information coming out about food allergies

14:11 - Experimentation

17:00 - Why are allergies on the rise?

19:27 - Recommended powders to help prevent allergies

24:21 - The 6-month mark

26:35 - What parents need to become more informed about

28:51 - 15-step plan for different allergy prevention methods

32:34 - Mom Haul

35:24 - Last words

Mom Haul:

AMAZON: Stokke Flexi Bath, Heat Sensitive Plug

AMAZON: Acko Folding Step Stool

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Soon after Meenal Lele's first child was diagnosed with multiple food allergies, new research upended decades of allergy advice. The LEAP study found that consistently adding allergenic foods beginning at four months of age could drastically reduce the rate of developing food allergies. The American Academy of Pediatrics subsequently began recommending that parents give allergenic foods to their babies early and often.

As Meenal struggled to prepare allergens three times a week for her second child, she realized how hard it was to mix nuts into baby food without exposing his older brother or contaminating the blender. There had to be a better way! She took my background in chemical engineering and worked with food scientists to develop a solution.

Lil Mixins is specially prepared to blend smoothly into breastmilk, formula, or baby foods, so it’s simple to give to infants. They use the best quality ingredients and no additives or sweeteners – the same way you would make it yourself, but without the mess. And they've made it so one jar of each product will last from early infancy until your baby can start to eat whole foods.

Their goal is to make early introduction easier for busy moms.

 

Meet My Guest:


WEBSITE: LilMixins.com

INSTAGRAM: @LilMixins

TWITTER: @LilMixins

YOUTUBE: Lil Mixins

FACEBOOK: @LilMixins

MOM SENSE PROMO: Use the code momsense15 (all lowercase) for 15% off Lil Mixins Peanut Powder

Press:

HUFFPOST: Allergies Are Becoming More Frequent. Why?

Show Notes:


02:00 - Introduction
03:30 - Meenal's story
07:35 - The story behind Meenal's son's food allergy
10:00 - New information coming out about food allergies
14:11 - Experimentation
17:00 - Why are allergies on the rise?
19:27 - Recommended powders to help prevent allergies
24:21 - The 6-month mark
26:35 - What parents need to become more informed about
28:51 - 15-step plan for different allergy prevention methods
32:34 - Mom Haul
35:24 - Last words

Mom Haul:


AMAZON: Stokke Flexi Bath, Heat Sensitive Plug

AMAZON: Acko Folding Step Stool

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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