Purées vs BLW vs Combo: Which Way to Start Solids in Hong Kong?
Scroll through Xiaohongshu (RED) or a parenting group and you'd think starting solids is a war between two camps: the spoon-feeding "purée" parents and the baby-led weaning (BLW) purists. One side warns the other is raising a fussy eater; the other warns of choking. If you're a first-time Hong Kong parent, it's enough to make a simple bowl of congee feel terrifying.
Here's the honest truth, straight from the evidence: it's a spectrum, not tribes. Purées, BLW and combination feeding all start at around 6 months, all aim at the same finish line, and — crucially — the biggest health authorities do not tell you to pick one and defend it to the death. In fact Hong Kong's own Family Health Service (FHS) explicitly blesses a "middle way": spoon-feed iron-rich purée and put soft finger foods on the tray, in the very same meal.
This guide lays the three approaches side by side, defuses the number-one fear (choking) with the actual research, points you to the trade-off that genuinely matters (iron — not choking), and lands on the two non-negotiables every method shares. No dogma. No guilt.
The Three Ways to Start Solids
Think of it as one line with two ends. On the left, the parent leads with a spoon. On the right, the baby leads with their hands. Combination feeding sits in the middle — and that middle is where most families actually live.
Source: FHS "Starting Out" guide (6–24 months) and the FHS professional newsletter on spoon-feeding vs baby-led feeding. See references.
"Doesn't BLW Cause More Choking?"
This is the fear that keeps parents up at night — and the evidence is genuinely reassuring. When food is prepared safely, BLW does not raise choking risk compared with spoon-feeding.
In the BLISS randomised controlled trial, cited in the FHS professional newsletter, BLW babies gagged more at 6 months — but by 8 months the two groups' gagging and choking incidents had evened out to be similar. The AAP agrees: some studies suggest baby-led weaning does not pose a higher choking risk than traditional feeding. A 2025 peer-reviewed review (Nutrients) reports no difference in choking rates between BLW and spoon-fed babies.
That "no extra risk" finding holds only when food is prepped safely — soft, the right shape, and with high-choking-risk foods avoided. Choking remains a leading cause of infant injury, so the size and doneness rules further down are non-negotiable, whichever method you choose. Gagging, meanwhile, is common and expected as babies learn — it is not choking.
Gagging vs Choking
This single distinction removes most of the fear. Gagging is a normal, protective reflex that pushes food forward. Choking is an emergency. The tell-tale sign is sound and colour (FHS + NHS).
Gagging
- Loud — coughing, spluttering, retching
- Skin may look red
- Baby is moving air and often clears it themselves
- What to do: stay calm, watch, let baby work it out; clean up after they spit it out
Choking
- Quiet — little or no sound, no effective cough
- Skin, lips, gums or fingernails may turn blue
- Baby cannot breathe or cry
- What to do: shout for help, remove from the high chair, support chest & chin, give up to 5 back blows between the shoulder blades; call 999
Learn infant first aid before starting solids. Source: NHS Best Start in Life; FHS "Starting Out" guide.
The Real BLW Risk Is Iron, Not Choking
Here's what the headlines miss. Once your baby passes 6 months, their iron needs climb sharply — breast milk alone can no longer keep up. The 6–12 month requirement is high, around 11 mg of iron a day (FHS professional guidance).
The concern with strict BLW is that babies can find it hard to physically eat enough iron-rich food by hand in those early weeks. A New Zealand study found full-BLW babies ate less iron-fortified cereal and red meat, and had lower iron, zinc and B12 than spoon-fed babies. A chronic shortfall can lead to iron-deficiency anaemia, which affects development — so iron is the trade-off worth taking seriously, far more than choking.
/ day
This is the one nutrient all three approaches must deliver. Good iron-rich first foods (FHS): egg, dark leafy greens, pork or chicken liver, tofu and mashed beans, fish, and meat — all easy to mash into a purée or soft-cook into finger strips. The BLISS "recipe" (the fix for both iron and choking) is simple: every meal, serve one iron-rich food + one energy-rich food + one fruit or veg, and skip the high-choking-risk foods.
Soft, boneless iron-rich proteins that work in all three
Fish is a brilliant early iron food — soft, flaky and easy to serve any way you feed. Blend it into a smooth purée, soft-cook it into a finger strip for BLW, or flake it onto the combo tray. These wild-caught iBuddies baby portions are boneless fillets, pre-portioned for a single serving:
Cook fish completely through — no translucency; the flesh should flake easily and juices run clear. Never serve undercooked fish to an infant. Run your fingers along every piece and remove all bones before serving.
Fish is a common allergen: introduce it on its own, in a tiny amount, and watch for 2–3 days before adding the next new food. Thaw frozen baby portions in the fridge (never on the counter), then cook thoroughly.
There Is No "Winner" — Aim for the Middle Way
Every major authority converges on the same answer: responsive, combo-friendly feeding. Pick what fits your baby's readiness on any given day, and feel free to mix.
FHS (the "middle way"): as long as the food you give is rich in iron and energy, parents may choose the feeding method they prefer, based on the baby's development, feeding ability and readiness. Offer iron-rich purée on a spoon alongside finger foods — let baby lean in, open their mouth, or take the spoon to suck the purée themselves.
AAP: you can flex the baby-led concept to fit your family — puréed foods can be nutritious too, so don't feel guilty for offering them. Permission, in black and white.
If your baby isn't reaching for food yet, start by spoon-feeding iron-rich purée — and offer finger foods once they actively reach and mouth things. That's not "failing at BLW." That's following the baby.
The Two Things Every Method Must Get Right
Around 11 mg/day from 6–12 months. Include an iron-rich food at every meal — meat, fish, egg yolk, liver, iron-fortified cereal, dark leafy veg, tofu or beans. Breast milk or formula continues to fill nutrient gaps alongside.
Soft finger strips about 7–10 cm long, squashable between two fingers — never round coin slices. Cook animal proteins through. Introduce allergens one at a time. Know gag from choke.
Doneness: meat and fish cooked through — no pink, juices run clear; egg fully set (no runny yolk for first tastes). Remove all bones.
Safe sizes: soft finger strips about 7–10 cm long, finger-shaped like a small carrot, squashable between two fingers. Never round coin slices. Cut grapes and cherry tomatoes lengthways into quarters.
Avoid choking hazards: whole nuts, corn, peas, hard raw veg or apple, sausage rounds, hard candy — anything that can't be squashed on the palate.
One new food at a time: introduce a single new food, watch 2–3 days for a reaction before the next. Don't delay allergens to "prevent" allergy — it doesn't work. Severe eczema or known allergy → see your paediatrician first.
Hard rules under 1: no added salt, no sugar, and no honey (botulism risk). Keep flavours bland. Avoid high-mercury fish (shark, swordfish, marlin, king mackerel, bigeye/bluefin tuna).
Iron-Rich Fish for Every Method
Blend for a purée, soft-cook into a BLW strip, or flake onto the combo tray. All wild-caught, boneless, vacuum-sealed in single baby portions, with no added salt, sugar, hormones or additives. Cook through, check for bones, introduce on its own.
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Sources Cited in This Guide
- Hong Kong Department of Health, Family Health Service (FHS) — Healthy Eating for Infants & Young Children 6–24 Months (1): Starting Out (last revised 02/2026): fhs.gov.hk
- Hong Kong Department of Health, FHS professional platform — Introducing Solids: Spoon-Feed or Let Baby Self-Feed? (the "middle way" guidance; page updated 2024-05-14): fhs.gov.hk
- American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), HealthyChildren.org — "Baby-Led Weaning: Is It Safe?" (last updated 12/3/2024): healthychildren.org
- NHS Best Start in Life — Choking and gagging on food (modified 26 Jan 2026): nhs.uk
- Nutrients 2025, 17(6):899 (PMC) — "Baby-Led Weaning vs. Traditional Complementary Feeding" (choking parity; BLISS closes the iron gap): pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Last reviewed: July 2026. This is general education, not medical advice — always consult your paediatrician or Hong Kong's Family Health Service (FHS) for individualised guidance, especially if your baby has severe eczema, a known food allergy, or was born preterm.