Japanese babies are introduced to rice, dashi, tofu, and fish at an early age. Learn all about baby food milestones in Japan and what the Japanese feed their very hungry little ones.

A tray with 3 bowls of Japanese baby food for age 7-8 months

Have you wondered what Japanese parents feed their tiny tots? Hint: it’s not 🍣 or 🍤 or 🍜! Then, what are some of the first foods that Japanese babies eat?

Hello there, I’m Kayoko. I’m a contributing writer for Just One Cookbook based in Tokyo and a mother to an almost 2-year-old daughter.

Like many new parents, when the time came to transition to solid food, I searched high and low for information regarding the bewildering new world of baby food.

My Own Baby Food Experience

You might be reading this because you’re about to start the solid food journey with your baby and are interested in introducing Japanese food to her/him. Or just a curious reader! You’re not alone; we have received so many requests for Japanese baby food in the past like this:

Hi, JOC!

I have a hungry toddler and I’ve been wondering what babies and children in Japan eat on a day-to-day basis. I adore Japanese food and your homestyle dishes but when I offered them to my child, he wasn’t too thrilled with the new foods.

I’d love to find out more about what Japanese parents feed their children and if I can incorporate some dishes to his meals. Thanks!

-L.L. (a JOC reader)

Through my research and findings, it was fascinating that the information regarding baby food in Japanese and English (primarily U.S.-based) was starkly different. This includes cultural practices, messaging, and the varieties of food offered.

For instance, many baby food sources in the West list avocado, mango, nut butter, and fortified cereals as introductory foods for babies. Baby-led weaning (BLW) is well-known, and many resources exist. However, as you’ll soon learn, Japanese babies are fed Japanese foods like rice, tofu, and dashi from an early stage. Most Japanese parents spoon-feed their babies these foods until they can use utensils much later.

Although I cannot compare with parents outside of Japan, I’d like to share my experience introducing solids to my daughter and baby food in Japan. Remember that this is just one parent sharing her observations and discoveries, so I hope you enjoy learning about the different cultural aspects.

💁🏻‍♀️ Please note that I am not a nutritionist, dietician, or expert in the field of baby food. For those who wish to introduce Japanese foods to your baby/child, please do your research, vet your sources, and consult your pediatricians.

Japan Baby Food Information

In this post, I’ll cover:

Japanese Baby Food Guidelines

It is impossible to make a fair comparison of baby foods worldwide; however, through my research, I found several aspects exciting and perhaps unique to Japan.

1. Clear guidelines from the government

Baby food in Japanese is called Rinyushoku (離乳食; literally “food separated from milk,” refers to food given to a baby between 5/6mo to 18mo). In Japan, babies typically begin eating solids after the 5-6 month checkup.

Information regarding Rinyushoku is primarily based on the guidelines of the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare (MHLW). It is established by a board of doctors, healthcare providers, and registered dieticians. The guidelines range from the size and softness of the cooked vegetables to the thickness of the rice porridge when certain foods can be given to the baby… it’s pretty specific!

Baby food chart by age.

For the most part, regardless of what baby food recipe book you pick up, you won’t find conflicting information regarding types of food and the stages given. Because of this consistency, most parents and childcare facilities follow these guidelines (MHLW 2019 info in Japanese).

Other non-MHLW-approved baby food practices have slowly gained traction in Japan among some parents and pediatricians. Notably, baby-led weaning (BLW) is the practice of babies self-feeding finger foods rather than being spoon-fed (I did a mix of purees and BLW). There are some books and resources in Japanese, but most babies are spoon-fed initially until they move on to more solid foods and can use utensils.

2. Emphasis on introducing Japanese food

Similar to other countries, babies are exposed to the traditional/native cuisine of their culture at an early age to build an appreciation for their cuisine later in life.

Baby food chart by age.
The chart shows what type of foods can be consumed at each stage.

In Japan, babies are given rice, tofu, natto, seaweed, dashi, sweet potato, and other Japanese ingredients at an early stage. Parents then gradually incorporate more foods and dishes into a simplified Ichiju Sansai meal around two years old.

3. Pressure to make baby food from scratch

Perhaps this is a universal headache parents feel worldwide, but there is tremendous pressure to prepare baby food from scratch! While there is a diverse and affordable selection of ready-made baby foods, most Japanese baby food cookbooks feature labor-intensive recipes of pureeing, straining, mashing, and grinding meats and vegetables by hand.

Many cookbooks emphasize that preparing baby food from scratch is an act of love during a relatively short period of a child’s life. This may be true, but it is quite the hurdle for any parent whether s/he is additionally balancing work. A 2016 poll of Japanese guardians by the MHLW found that 33.5% of responders said that their top concern regarding baby food is preparing it. Talking to friends with children, many said they struggle to feed their children nutritious, homemade baby food without overburdening themselves with all the cooking.

Baby food chart by age.
The chart shows how to feed solid food at different stages.

As for Japanese pre-made baby foods, the food companies must align with the guidelines of the MHLW. They undergo rigorous screening and must label their products according to the appropriate months. These baby foods are available in powdered, freeze-dried, retort pouches and containers for easy prep. They tend to be free of additives, fragrances, and artificial colors and have food allergies listed in the package.

Despite its wide availability, I felt a slight twinge of guilt picking up a few pre-made meals for convenience. Many cookbooks help you meal prep for the week. However, I found that a mix of store-bought baby foods and homemade food was a healthy balance for me and my baby. I heavily relied on my hand blender and stocked the freezer with purees and different textures of foods.

4. Resources for baby food

When researching baby food in the U.S., I noticed many excellent resources by registered dieticians and feeding specialists. This information is shared on their websites, Instagram accounts, or paid seminars (I relied on @feedinglittles, @solidstarts, and @newwaysnutrition).

While these extraordinarily qualified and tech-savvy individuals provide a tremendous amount of quality research-based information, I found it curious that U.S. government agencies weren’t actively promoting their resources on baby food (there are some, as this page by the U.S. Department of Agriculture). It seemed like most parents were off to find reliable information. Of course, in a multicultural and diverse country like the U.S., a blanket guideline that considers all the various food cultures and observances would be near impossible. It makes sense that parents seek information that suits their family’s and babies’ needs.

Chart to show much food baby should eat.
The chart shows how much food the baby should consume for each stage.

In Japan, it’s a stark contrast with an abundance of books on baby food, most following the MHLW guidelines. Plus, many pediatrician clinics, local municipal offices/wards, and NPOs offer seminars and workshops for new parents (in person or online, and most are free!) to learn more about baby foods.

When my daughter had her 5/6 month checkup at our ward office, the pediatrician gave us a booklet of baby food recipes and directed me to a link to online classes if interested. I picked a baby food cookbook at the bookstore and mostly followed along.

Basic Japanese Foods Given to Babies

So, what do we feed babies in Japan? I’ll stick to the 5-month to 18-month period when babies experience their first taste of Rinyushoku. Once the baby graduates from Rinyushoku, the next step is called Youjishoku (幼児食; literally “toddler food,” refers to foods post-Rinyushoku up until around five years old).

Babies are exposed to various Japanese and non-Japanese foods through their baby food journey. In this article, I’ll be focusing only on Japanese food.

1. Rice

A Japanese baby cookbook explaining how to freeze baby food rice.

No price for guessing this right: a Japanese baby’s very first food is white rice. It is our number one staple food, after all. Rice is easily digestible, versatile, and affordable, and rice allergens are relatively uncommon. Babies are first given a watery rice porridge called Jubai Gayu (10倍粥; literally “ten times rice porridge,” which is white rice cooked with ten times the amount of water). Then, gradually given less watery porridge over the next several months.

This porridge can be made by adding extra water when cooking rice in the rice cooker. Or microwaving cooked rice with water and grinding it to a smooth paste. It’s also available in powdered form, which must be reconstituted.

2. Dashi

Dashi stock for babies.

Babies are given small amounts of dashi (Japanese soup stock) to add some flavor to purees and rice porridge. Made with water steeped in kombu seaweed and sometimes bonito flakes, dashi is preferred over salt, soy sauce, or miso because of its low sodium content. A bit of dashi adds a taste boost to the food, especially for babies learning new flavors. It’s also used to thin out purees.

As powdered dashi tends to have additives and a lot of salt, homemade dashi, whether fish-based, mixed, or vegan (kombu or shiitake), is recommended. You can also find low-sodium dashi packets suitable for babies. Leftover dashi can be frozen in ice cube trays for easy use next time.

Dashi can be given to babies in the early 5-6 month period.

3. Soybean Products (Tofu, Natto, etc)

Kinugoshi Tofu (Soft Tofu) | Easy Japanese Recipes at JustOneCookbook.com

Tofu, natto, koyadofu, and other soy ingredients such as kinako, soy milk, and yuba (dried tofu skins) are excellent plant-based protein sources. Silken tofu can easily be crumbled up for easy spoon-feeding. Once the baby can eat more solid foods, s/he can transition to firm tofu cut into cubes, which can be picked up with a fork or fingers.

Ground-up koyadofu and kinako can be sprinkled on top of purees, yogurt, and rice porridge. If the powders are mixed into wet foods, they can be served in the early 5-6 months.

Natto (fermented soybeans) is a Japanese superfood that provides a good source of probiotics. And yes, it is known for its sticky, slimy texture and pungent smell that many foreigners describe as smelly cheese. Since it requires an acquired taste, the Japanese know it’s best to introduce natto to babies as early as possible. Natto can be served as is or chopped up and snuck into rice porridge or purees. There is also finely chopped natto called Hikiwari Natto (ひき割り納豆), which is available wherever natto is sold.

We leave out the soy sauce-based seasoning and mustard as they are high in sodium. If the smell puts your baby (or you) off, pour hot water over the natto and drain well. That should remove some of that funkiness.

My daughter has loved natto from the first day we served it to her, and she prefers to eat it as is, which was picking up the beans with her fingers and smearing it all over her face (cue in the eye-rolling and the messy cleanup afterward).

For older babies, we also serve fried tofu such as atsuage and aburaage by draining the oil out with hot water and chopping it into manageable pieces.

4. Japanese Noodles

Udon Noodles (Frozen and Dry) | Easy Japanese Recipes at JustOneCookbook.com

The Japanese love noodles just as much as rice, so naturally, we start serving wheat-based noodles such as udon and somen noodles to our babies in the early 5-6 month period. We would cook the noodles until they soften and chop them into tiny pieces for easy digestion.

Dried noodles have salt added to extend their shelf life, so wash and drain the cooked noodles very well. I found somen noodles tricky to serve as the thin noodles clung to everything: the bowl, clothes, hair, basically everywhere! Udon was much more manageable; my daughter could pick the cut noodles with her fingers.

Soba noodles are made with buckwheat, which is a known food allergen. Just be cautious when serving.

5. Non-Caffeinated Tea

Mugicha for babies.

Not a food, but non-caffeinated tea such as mugicha (麦茶; barley tea) is a popular drink often served to babies, usually when they start solids. There are mugicha tea bags and drink packets for babies and little children.

Since mugicha is naturally non-caffeinated, regular mugicha packets will also suffice. I always have a pitcher of mugicha in the fridge year-round and would pour a glass for my daughter during mealtimes or pour it into her water bottle whenever we went outside. Of course, tea should never be served as a replacement for breast milk/formula.

Mugicha, hojicha, and other tea for babies.

Other types of Japanese tea that can be served to babies and children are green tea and hojicha, although make sure to look for non-caffeinated varieties.

Japanese Baby Food Stages

The MHLW guidelines divide the baby food stage into four sections, starting at the 5-6 month mark until the baby “graduates” at 18 months.

Stage 1: 5-6 Months

A tray with two bowls of Japanese baby food for 5-6 month age.
Rice porridge, crumbled silken tofu with tomato and komatsuna puree

An example menu I fed my daughter

  • Okayu (Jubai gayu 十倍粥)
  • Udon or somen noodles, cooked until soft and chopped up into tiny pieces
  • Finely crumbled silken tofu
  • White fish such as cod, sea bream, or flounder steam cooked, then mashed up and thinned with dashi
  • Vegetable purees such as tomato, pumpkin, carrot, daikon, komatsuna, taro root, and napa cabbage
A Japanese baby cookbook explaining the texture of the baby food.

Like in many cultures, the first stage of baby food is all about purees and soft foods. As mentioned above, a baby’s first food is white rice, which s/he will continue to eat with a spoonful for the first few days. The portions tend to be small and given once a day, as the primary source of nutrition still comes from breast milk/formula.

Other purees such as vegetables, cooked white fish, and crumbled silken tofu are commonly fed to babies during this time. Besides rice, starches mashed or finely chopped, such as udon and somen noodles cooked very well, white bread, oatmeal, potatoes, and taro root can also be fed.

I served rice porridge and the vegetable/protein dish separately but merged the two dishes for a donburi-style meal for easy prep.

Rice porridge for babies.
Packaged Baby Foods for 5-6 Months

Stage 2: 7-8 Months

A tray with 3 bowls of Japanese baby food for age 7-8 months
Rice porridge with chopped natto, cubed silken tofu, and carrot soup

An example menu I fed my daughter

  • Okayu (Nanabai gayu, 七倍粥, literally “seven times rice porridge,” rice that’s cooked with 7 times the amount of water) with chopped natto
  • Canned tuna flakes mixed with diced cooked vegetables and dashi
  • Cubed silken tofu
  • Soup made of pureed kabocha and soy milk

The 7-8 month period is characterized by the baby’s ability to chew with her/his gums, close the lips, and swallow, so the foods transition from purees to diced foods. Parents usually give the baby two meals a day to start building a mealtime routine.

A Japanese baby cookbook explaining weekly baby food menus.

As I did a mix of spoon-feeding and BLW, mealtimes were messy. But thanks to the constant cleaning after mealtime, our dining table and floor were always (near) spotless!

Baby foods on the store shelf.
Packaged Baby Foods for 7-8 Months

Stage 3: 9-11 Months

A tray with a bowl containing baby food for age 9-11 months
Yaki udon with vegetables and ground meat

An example menu I fed my daughter

  • Lightly seasoned and chopped yaki udon
  • Egg omelet with steamed fish flakes
  • Ground chicken patties with natto and chopped vegetables
  • Boiled unsalted edamame chopped up and mixed with yogurt
Baby foods for 9-11 months.
Baby foods for 9-11 months.

By this period, babies are able to chew soft foods similar to a ripened banana texture. Parents usually transition their baby to 3 meals a day, where they get most of their daily nutrition from foods instead of breast milk/formula. They may also be more adventurous to eat with a fork, spoon, or hands.

My daughter was a ravenous eater, so we didn’t have any difficulty feeding her 3 times a day, but some of my friends struggled with uninterested babies, and stuck with 2 meals.

Packaged baby foods.
Packaged Baby Foods for 9-11 Months

Stage 4: 12-18 Months

A tray containing 3 bowls of baby food for age 12-18 months.
Onigiri, miso soup with tofu, omelet with mackerel and bell peppers

An example menu I fed my daughter

A Japanese baby cookbook explaining baby food menus.

By this time, many mothers have stopped breastfeeding/giving formula and are feeding similar foods that the rest of the family eats with less seasoning. The food should be soft enough to be crushed with the back of a spoon.

I enjoyed serving our daughter the same food we were eating (added more spice and flavor in our portions) as not only was it so much easier than prepping food just for her but because she seemed so much more interested in what we were eating and would try to snatch food off our plates. It seemed like she was learning about the communal aspect of eating!

Baby foods on the store shelf.
Packaged Baby Foods for 12-18 Months

Japanese Foods Not Suitable for Babies

Babies’ immune system is delicate; their teeth and jaws are still developing, and thus, they cannot quickly process many foods that older children and adults can eat. Here are some foods that should never be served to babies.

Chart to show what baby can and cannot eat.

Mochi

The sticky, chewy texture of mochi is a choking hazard and should never be served to babies and young children. Most parents wait until at least three years old when the child has grown all her/his baby teeth and can properly chew and swallow food. Mochi is a hazard; there are unfortunate cases of suffocation from eating mochi by young children and the elderly every Japanese New Year. Even if you cut the mochi into tiny pieces, the stickiness can lodge into their tiny throats, so wait until they are older to enjoy it safely.

Similarly, mochigome (glutinous rice) and anything made with it (including Sekihan) should be avoided altogether.

Brown Rice

While brown rice is nutritious compared to white rice, it is highly fibrous and challenging for babies to digest. Even if cooked into rice porridge, the hard hull will remain. Therefore, it’s best to give white rice.

Sashimi and Raw Seafood

Any raw seafood, even sashimi-grade quality, is not suitable for babies. Not only is the texture difficult for babies to chew (think octopus, squid, shrimp, and shellfish), but the risk of parasitic infections and food poisoning is not worth the potential rush to the hospital. While the MHLW and other agencies do not give an exact age when raw seafood can be safely consumed, most parents wait around 3-4 years.

Sushi with cooked toppings such as boiled shrimp, unagi, and vegetables can be served to toddlers, but babies should skip it.

Shirataki and Konnyaku/konjak

Shirataki noodles and konnyaku/konjac are products made of yam plants. The texture is rubbery and difficult to chew, so they should be avoided during the baby stage, even if cut into manageable pieces.

Seasoned Nori, Tsukudani, and Tsukemono

Seasoned nori, tsukudani, and tsukemono are common rice accompaniments in Japan. However, due to the high sodium content, they should be avoided altogether. Unseasoned nori is fine, although it can stick to the roof of the mouth, so it should be given with caution. In the early stages, you could serve shredded nori mixed into rice porridge or cooked rice for easy consumption.

A tray containing 3 bowls of baby food for age 12-18 months.

I hope this gave you an insight into what Japanese baby food is like. Although I only touched upon one aspect of Japanese baby food, babies here are exposed to many non-Japanese foods, such as bread, pasta, oatmeal, cheese, and more!

Again, I am not a nutritionist or an expert on baby food. If you wish to feed your baby Japanese food, please consult your doctor/pediatrician. Ultimately, as the parent, you know what’s best for your baby!

In part 2, I will address some of the questions asked by readers that Nami asked on her Instagram a while ago. If you also have questions, please post in the comment box below!

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Hi Kayoko! Thanks so much for this interesting and informative post. I wish this had been available when my little one was starting solids! Similar to another reader who posted earlier, my heritage is Vietnamese and I can definitely see some similarities. Having grown up in Australia though, I ended up doing a combination of what I had observed in my own family (so yes, lots of rice porridge and root veggie purees) alongside other approaches (like BLW). I think it makes so much sense though having consistent and clear guidelines from the government and health authorities — it would take out so much of that guesswork (and probably the anxiety, too!) especially for those who are first-time parents. Nowadays, I’m just trying to expose my little one (who’s almost 3) to as many flavours and cuisines as possible, Japanese included. I do find a lot of joy and comfort in cooking, but it can be hard work — I sometimes feel as though I spend half the day in the kitchen! Anyway, thanks again. Looking forward to your follow-up article 🙂

What a great article, lots of good information. Why didn’t I think of introducing natto when baby… Thank you so much.

Such a great article with such great information. I wish we had such reliable resources in the US. Yes it’s there but the emphasis on quality and keeping it up to date is not due to the reactionary nature of the culture and the lack of importance in investing into resources (but a profound emphasis on cost cutting). Gosh, I just can’t get over how easy and helpful those charts are that are provided in Japan. They’re made easy enough to understand a good portion of it without even knowing Japanese! 😀 I can’t even say how many hours we spent verifying and reverifying resources for their reliability and inconsistency.
Another thing is the quality of foods and ingredients in the US. Rice cereal was recently (about 4 months ago I believe) taken off the shelves due to arsenic levels. I do not know the difference in what is considered safe in Japan vs the US, but I think the origin for the rice cereal in the US is from the US, just like so much of the rice sold for adult consumption is from the US. This in turn has levels dependent on water quality and farming techniques, which I am sure differ from how Japan is and the US is. Knowing this makes me hesitant at this time of using rice here for my 7 month old daughter (even though I would love to due to our Asian ancestry).
The only other thing I can think of is what would be a good online retail to source these from? Especially the low-sodium dashi. Often times I forget to make more dashi and having some instant dashi for the little one as back up would be great.

I can only speak for what I have heard in Germany, but at least in China the acceptable level of arsenic in rice is much lower than in European countries. So the rice unacceptable for consumption in China gets exported….
I think it’s custom in all countries that consume rice traditionally to wash rice before boiling which removes a lot of arsenic. Of course you can’t wash rice cereal 🙁

Our two year-old was so disgusted by natto as I stirred it up that he fled the room. Then later I fed it to him mixed in with eggy rice and when it was all gone he said “more more natto?”

This was so interesting! I was raised in America and my parents are Taiwanese and Vietnamese. They definitely didn’t have this much structure but I can see some similarities in the foods served to babies in our family. Lots of rice porridge haha. It is so interesting to think about the difference in foods fed to babies at different stages between cultures and countries!

Such good information for nutritious alternatives to add to any diet,

This is a lovely read, thank you!

Do you have any recommendations for decaffeinated green teas?

I was searching for such information some month ago. I just found non reliable and non authentic information. Thank you! This is so helpfull and well exlpained. My little one is exactly 5 month old and I really like the idea of homemade dashi with rice for him.

Hi,

Thanks for posting! As a pediatrician myself and a Japan fanatic, this post was very interesting to read. Please post more of these if possible.

Also, if you have the links to the cookbook used in the post or the government guidelines on a PDF I would be very interested in receiving them or knowing where to get them.

Although my girls were babies long before I got really interested in Japanese cooking, I have always fed my babies tofu. I think it is the perfect baby/toddler food. They can self-feed easily and they like it. As adults, my daughters–and my 11-year-old grandson–still love tofu in many forms, including plain little cold cubes as they ate it as babies. (I suppose it helps that I love it, too!)

Thank you for this really interesting, informative and lovely article!

love learning about different cultures and how they do it! thank you!!

very helpful thank you!

This is so interesting! Thank you for posting!

Thank you Kayoko!
My little one just turned 4 months old, and I’m already researching baby foods.

Could you share a link of the Japanese baby food cookbook you bought? Or some that were recommended to you?

that was great fun to read!