Frequently Asked Questions
How do I receive the ebooks?
Instantly. Within seconds of payment, you'll receive an email with download links to all 5 PDF ebooks, and a direct download link will also be available on the order confirmation page.
Save them to your phone, tablet, laptop, or print them out. They're yours forever. No subscription, no expiration, no app needed.
My baby is only 4 months old — is this for us?
The guide is designed specifically for babies aged 6-12 months, the standard window for starting solids. If your baby is younger than 5.5 months, we recommend waiting until they show readiness signs (sitting up with support, lost tongue-thrust reflex, interest in food).
You can absolutely buy now and keep it ready. Many moms do exactly that during their third trimester. For babies older than 12 months, the 10-12 month section still applies, but you'll move through the early purees quickly.
What if I'm not satisfied?
You get a 30-day money-back guarantee. If this guide doesn't meet your expectations, contact us within 30 days for a full refund — no questions asked. We're confident in the value, and we want you to be too.
Will my baby actually eat these recipes?
Every recipe is built on familiar Indian ingredients — ragi, moong dal, ghee, seasonal fruits, kitchen-staple vegetables — which means flavours your baby will encounter at every family meal as they grow.
Because 6-12 months is the window when taste preferences are forming, acceptance rates are dramatically higher than with "imported" baby food approaches.
The texture progression chart helps you match consistency to what baby can actually handle at each stage, which is usually where rejection comes from.
What about food allergies?
The entire guide is built around the 3-Day Rule. Introduce one new food, wait 3 consecutive days, watch for reactions before moving to the next.
The Baby Food Tracker is a printable checklist of 150+ foods organized by group (fruits, vegetables, grains, dairy, lentils, eggs, fish, meat, nuts, spices) so you can systematically introduce and document each one.
Common allergens in the Indian diet — peanuts, dairy, wheat, fish, eggs — are addressed with specific safe-introduction timelines.
Can I print the ebooks?
Absolutely. All ebooks are A4 format and print beautifully. Many moms print the daily meal plan and stick it on the fridge, print the Baby Food Tracker as a tick-box checklist, and fold the Travel Cheat Sheet into the diaper bag. The Dadima Home Remedies Guide is especially useful as a printed bedside reference for late-night colic, fevers, and blocked noses.






