Dear D. G.,
Fruits you would want to, leave raw, but wash them thoroughly with cold water (and your hands being clean first). Peel those that you would eat yourself peeled (like mango). Place in blender and blend, texture depends on the age of the child. Five months old or 6 months you want quite runny. Pour into ice cube tray and freeze in the freezer. When frozen solid, pop out of tray and into a zip-lock bag and put back into the freezer until a while before you want the child to eat it. You only take out as many cubes of frozen fruit as your child will eat at one sitting. You generally don't want to save left overs.
Other foods you will cook all the way done and cool before you put into blender to liquify. After allowing to completely cool, put into blender with a little water or milk, depending on the food. In cooked potatoes you would use milk. In peas, peas/carrots you would use water. Don't put any spices into the food when you cook it because young stomachs can't usually tolerate any spices at all. After blending into liquid pour into clean ice cube trays and freeze. After frozen solid pop out of trays and place into zip lock bag. You can do a separate bag for each different food. Much cheaper than buying baby food even if you have to use unsalted vegetables out of the can to make it. If you can grow your own in the garden and it works out with the baby's age and needing it now, that is even better. Anything you can grow in your own garden is often lower cost than what you have to buy but you can buy fresh fruits/vegetables at a farmer's market in your local area. I did it years ago and it saved me money and gave me healthier foods to feed my kids. More flavor, too, because it was fresher than what I could buy as baby food.
If you don't cook the foods all the way done, the baby's digestive tract may not be able to handle foods that fresh, especially vegetables with a lot of fiber.
You will learn how much moisture to insert by trial and error. It is something you learn by your baby's likes, as well. Breastmilk is the best to use as the liquid.
I would give your baby a little runny rice cereal at night when you are exhausted and need some more sleep. Make your cereal extremely runny with the breastmilk and spoon feed to the baby. The baby lets a lot run out at first, but gets better with practice and the food eating will be done the same way as the cereal eating. Keeping in mind that the more food/cereal eaten by baby usually means the less milk produced.
Fruits and vegetables with the least other things added in are the best. Until you know if you baby has allergies to any particular foods and its likes, you don't want to make up too much of any certain food until you learn if it even will eat it. Only fix a small portion of each thing you choose so you don't waste a lot of time, energy, and money on things it may not like.
L. C.
L. C.