I use microwave oven to make my son's milk hot for less than 1 min. Is it OK? Or it is not advisable??
Question: It is fresh milk. What can I do as alternative.
Answers: Yes, it is OK. I assume your son is an infant. Just don't let it get too warm - you wouldn't want to burn his mouth. The other alternatives are using a pan of water on the stove to warm a bottle placed in the pan or you can buy bottle warmers at the store.
I've also seen people use the type of coffee warmer that you place directly into the cup. Never tried that though !!
no harm will come from this ive been doing it for as many years as there have been microwaves for milk,coffee.tea etc.
its fine no worries
you dont need to do it for a whole minute maybe 30sec. or so and its perfectly fine. i microwaved my 5 kids bottles the whole time they took a bottle. it is very convient way especially if your a working mother. any short cuts will make a big differece.
As much as they say don't use a microwave to warm up baby's milk it's perfectly okay. The reason for this is that microwaves create hot spots and some folks just give the bottle to the baby after warming it up without shaking the bottle and checking it on your wrist to make sure the tempurature is appropriate for your baby's mouth.
An alternative would be to place the bottle in a pot or cup of hot water and let it sit until it warms up . . . but with a crying baby that could take waaaaaayyyyy tooooooo long :-)
I wouldn't use the microwave, I would simply put it in a pan and put it on the range. Scientists are now saying that microwaving may change the internal structure of the substance with unknown long range side effects. Do what mothers did before microwaves. Yeah it takes a little more time. What is the health of your infant worth?
Answers: Yes, it is OK. I assume your son is an infant. Just don't let it get too warm - you wouldn't want to burn his mouth. The other alternatives are using a pan of water on the stove to warm a bottle placed in the pan or you can buy bottle warmers at the store.
I've also seen people use the type of coffee warmer that you place directly into the cup. Never tried that though !!
no harm will come from this ive been doing it for as many years as there have been microwaves for milk,coffee.tea etc.
its fine no worries
you dont need to do it for a whole minute maybe 30sec. or so and its perfectly fine. i microwaved my 5 kids bottles the whole time they took a bottle. it is very convient way especially if your a working mother. any short cuts will make a big differece.
As much as they say don't use a microwave to warm up baby's milk it's perfectly okay. The reason for this is that microwaves create hot spots and some folks just give the bottle to the baby after warming it up without shaking the bottle and checking it on your wrist to make sure the tempurature is appropriate for your baby's mouth.
An alternative would be to place the bottle in a pot or cup of hot water and let it sit until it warms up . . . but with a crying baby that could take waaaaaayyyyy tooooooo long :-)
I wouldn't use the microwave, I would simply put it in a pan and put it on the range. Scientists are now saying that microwaving may change the internal structure of the substance with unknown long range side effects. Do what mothers did before microwaves. Yeah it takes a little more time. What is the health of your infant worth?
More questions & answers:
- Will drinking milk make me grow taller?
- Should we REALLY drink cows milk?
- Can you become allergic to anythign i.e milk, gluten at any time of your life?
- Can taking Milk of Magnesia cause blood in feces?
- If you are lactose intolerant, how do you keep up the calorie intake when a lot of foods have milk in them?
- Which is better for your body: orange or milk?
- Does milk really help you grow?
- Milk Thistle available in the UK?
- My 21 month old has severe diarrea, won't eat except for milk and water, and butt area very inflamed?
The health informations are posted by the website users and for your use only, and without responsibility on content2point0.com.
