Use This Baby Food Hack to Create Healthier Snacks and Desserts


Many of us tend to follow recipes exactly when baking, but making a few creative changes can improve our health and our goodies! One of the easiest, most inexpensive “hacks” in baking is to use jars of organic baby food.

Baby food carrots, prunes, squash, bananas, pumpkin, and apples are just like applesauce and canned pumpkin; they can be used to replace eggs, oil, and sugar in a recipe, and they can be highly convenient if you don’t want to spend the time cooking and mashing all those ingredients yourself. 

This is also an easy way to improve the sweetness, flavor, and texture of a baked good without adding many calories. Baby food veggies and fruits are high in natural sugars and complex carbs — and if you get high-quality organic varieties, most have no additives. Just be sure to check the label! 

Baby food is cheap, healthy, and handy to keep in your pantry… what more could you ask for!

Plant-based and allergy-free

If you’re vegan, a plant-based eater, or have an egg allergy or intolerance, baking without eggs can be a challenge at first. Baby food comes to the rescue here as well. 

Typically, bananas, prunes, and pumpkin are the best options, since they are firmer in texture than applesauce, carrots, and butternut squash — though you can use any of these and adjust the other ingredients in a recipe if needed. Normally, a quarter cup of bananas, pumpkin and prunes can replace one egg.

Just be sure you use at least 1 teaspoon of baking soda in your recipe so the baked goods rise well. These ingredients also add moisture and sweetness, and allow you to eliminate the oil in a recipe if you wish.

If you have IBS, these foods are also great since they’re easy to digest and much gentler on the body than eggs or oil, which can be problematic for some people.

Great sugar substitute

You can also eliminate the sugar in a baked good recipe if you choose bananas, prunes, carrots, apples and applesauce, or apple butter. The results are even better if you use a mixture of these instead of just one. The fibers in baby food act as a binding agent to produce a firmer baked good, which is great when you’re not using eggs.

I like to make a loaf cake with bananas, apple butter, applesauce, and prunes. I use no sugar, oil, or eggs, and my family can’t even tell!

Other ideas include the following:

  • Carrots, butternut squash, and pumpkin with applesauce in a loaf cake
  • Prunes, apples, and pumpkin in muffins
  • Prunes and pumpkin in a cake recipe
  • Applesauce or apples with squash in a cake recipe
  • Carrots, apples, and pumpkin in a dessert of any kind

Just don’t forget…

When you bake with baby foods, you’ll need to be sure to add a final binder such as chia or flax. I simply use 2 tablespoons of ground flax seeds with my dry ingredients, as well as 1 teaspoon of baking soda to help the baked goods rise. If you’re making a smaller portion (for 6 instead of 10–12, which is standard for many recipes), reduce the ingredients to suit your needs. 

You can also use these healthy ingredients to flavor oatmeal, smoothies, soups, and more.

Baking with baby foods might seem odd at first, but they’re really no different than opening a can of pumpkin or container of applesauce. Give them a try and play around with different ones to see how much you enjoy them!