Canada Hormone-Free Baby Pork Tenderloin & Spinach Congee for Babies (10m+)
Pork Tenderloin & Spinach Congee
Pork and spinach is one of the most effective iron-boosting combinations in baby food. Pork tenderloin delivers heme iron — the highly bioavailable form found in meat — while spinach contributes non-heme iron and folate. Together in one silky congee, they create a bowl that addresses one of the most common nutritional concerns at the 10-month stage.
The tenderloin cooks directly in the congee, its natural juices flavouring every grain of rice as it simmers. The spinach goes in at the end — wilting gently into the hot congee and turning it a beautiful pale green that signals a meal packed with leafy green goodness.
Ingredients
Makes approx. 2–3 baby servings. Baby spinach is ideal — it's more tender and milder in flavour than mature spinach.
How to Make
Rinse rice and add to a saucepan with 330ml water and the pork tenderloin. Bring to a simmer, cover, and cook on low heat for 22 minutes until rice is silky and pork is cooked through.
Remove pork. Confirm fully cooked with no pink. Shred or mince into pieces appropriate for your baby's development. Return shredded pork to the congee and stir through.
Stir spinach into the hot congee. Cook on low heat for 2–3 minutes until spinach is wilted and tender. The congee will turn a beautiful pale green — a natural sign of folate and iron goodness.
Cool to a safe temperature. Serve 3–4 tablespoons. Refrigerate for up to 24 hours, or freeze in portions for up to 1 month.
Why Pork Tenderloin + Spinach Congee?
This pairing is nutritionally strategic: pork tenderloin provides heme iron and spinach provides non-heme iron — together they form one of the most iron-rich baby meals available. At 10 months, when many babies' iron stores are running low, this congee is exactly what growing bodies need.
Tips for Parents
Always add spinach in the last 2–3 minutes — this preserves more nutrients than cooking it from the beginning. Overcooked spinach loses colour and nutritional value. When you see it turn bright green and wilt, it's ready.
Congee thickens as it cools and after freezing. When reheating, add a splash of water and stir over low heat until it returns to a silky consistency. Never microwave without adding water first.
Vacuum-sealed for freshness. Best consumed within 3 months frozen. Thaw in the fridge overnight before use. Freeze in single-serve portions to make weekday feeding simple and quick.
Never add salt to baby food under 12 months. The natural flavour of pork tenderloin cooking in the congee creates a naturally seasoned, savoury broth that makes this a genuinely satisfying bowl — no additional flavouring needed.
Get the Canada Hormone-Free Baby Pork Tenderloin
50g per pack, baby-portioned, vacuum-sealed and freezer-ready. Buy 10+ packs for free delivery.
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