OXO Tot Silicone Baby Food Storage Container, Set of Four, 4oz Containers, Teal
$25.99
Price: $25.99
(as of Jan 28, 2025 19:49:34 UTC – Details)
Made from 100% flexible, BPA-free food-safe silicone, OXO Tot Silicone Baby Blocks have press-on leakproof lids for safely stacking, storing and transporting homemade baby food. Built-in measurement markings make it easy to portion purees, and the included storage tray keeps your fridge or freezer neat and tidy. Clear construction means no more guessing what’s in store—freezer, microwave and dishwasher safe
100% flexible, food-safe silicone baby food storage containers.
Portion, store, freeze, heat and serve baby food with ease.
Ideal for storing large batches of pureed foods and serving baby on the go
Storage tray keeps containers tidy in fridge or freezers
Airtight, watertight, press-on leak-proof lid seals tight to prevent messes
Clear lid and body keep contents easily visible, convenient measurement markings
Silicone body and lid; dishwasher and microwave safe
Customers say
Customers find these baby bottles sturdy and with a secure top. They have ample storage capacity for 4oz of purees and are suitable for daycare food storage or small snacks.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
8 reviews for OXO Tot Silicone Baby Food Storage Container, Set of Four, 4oz Containers, Teal
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$25.99
D. Bruce –
Love that the silicone sides are flexible and the container won’t break if dropped.
I have bought the glass version of this several times- never for baby food. I use them, for example, to put dog treats in to keep by a couple of tables, for cough drops bedside, etc.The silicone ones are really nice- just easier to use and non-breakable.
jt –
These are GREAT!
Got these to send baby food to daycare and I use them ALL the time. They are awesome. Somehow both sturdy and squishy at the same time, plenty of room for 4oz of purees and big enough we can use them for snacks on the go. They fit great in my purse and hold exactly the right amount of strawberries, blueberries, cheerios, etc. The lids seal well, though I’ve not tried a liquid test to see if they seal completely. Perfectly good enough for the above items though, including the purees. I haven’t really used the tray at all but it might be helpful for others. Love this brand, they have such great quality items.
Home Chef –
Great containers
I wish they came in other lid colors to mix and match. Very sturdy and seem to have a good secure top although I havenât tested liquids in it but would never add liquids and just throw it in my backpack just in case lid comes off if it hits things inside bag.Very good for smaller snack items and I plan to use them in the freezer so hopefully theyâll last at those temps on the long run. Iâm giving some to my mom and brotherâ¦wish they were cheaperâ¦I love OXO though!
Meghan –
Absolutely top notch just wish they were cheaper
I absolutely love using these to store my home made purées. I just wish they werenât as pricy. But they are very good quality. Just know if you make carrots they will stain. Thatâs just silicone for you. But they do the job and they do it well.
J. Hirko –
Great for daycare food storage
These are great for daycare. I’m not allowed to use glass and I didn’t want to use plastic. I like that you can put it in a tray and in a lunchbox. The size is perfect for my toddlers’ portions.
Danielle Jenkins –
Awesome!
I purchased these to heat up baby food I make for my little one. They are safe to reheat food in my steamer and microwave (if needed for time). They get warm but not hot to the touch and are very easy to clean and do not stain. The lids fit tightly and do not leak. Highly recommend!
GearFreak –
Nice containers, seem pure to me
I like these containers. I am not using them for baby food. I am using these for storing things like purees and pesto. It’s very convenient to freeze in these smaller size containers, then thaw one and use the contents for a few days from the fridge.Like most OXO products, they seem to be good quality. The lids fit well, dimensions seem accurate, etc. I don’t find much use for the tray because I just have these stacked vertically in my freezer.I did try to verify the composition of the container, because for food items (especially those meant for babies), you want to ensure there are no unexpected contaminants. A more proper analysis would probably use FTIR, NMR or mass spec, but I don’t have those instruments unfortunately. The only things I have are an XRF analyser and a raman spectrometer, both handheld units. I didn’t detect any metals except for a very small amount of Zinc (about 0.15%) with the XRF analyzer (keep in mind it’s a portable unit, so can probably only detect to the 50-100 ppm level or so).I also used my raman spectrometer to get a reading on the silicone container. The following is my interpretation of the results. However, keep in mind I am not a formally trained spectroscopy expert. If anyone reading this review is an expert, feel free to chime in with a comment about any errors I’ve made and I will correct them. My unit matched the spectrum to D5 siloxane. This is sometimes used as a precursor building block for silicone and silicone rubbers, but I believe it was a false match. The library on my spectrometer unit doesn’t actually have a pure silicone, like PDMS, in it — it seems to only have some of the other precursors like the D5 siloxane that was matched. Additionally, the raman spectrum for a silicone polymer like PDMS looks nearly indistinguishable from the D5 spectrum in my library. I believe this is because the D5 siloxane molecule is essentially a circularized version of 5 building blocks from a PDMS polymer. Due to the circularization, it does not have the methyl end groups that would show up in a short polymer chain spectrum, and thus appears to mimic the spectrum retrieved from long polymer chains. If you look at the raman spectrum for pure PDMS of various chain lengths (you can reference Figure 3 in Jayes et. al., Analytical Chemistry, 2003) you’ll see the main difference between short and long chain polymers (in the range I can test, which is about 300 to 2800) is the ratio of the peaks at 709 and 1000 cm^-1. The spectrum I obtained closely resembled the long chain PDMS spectrums presented in that article.At some point in the future, I might put some oil or DMSO into one of these containers to see if anything leaches out, and will update this review if I find anything interesting.In summary, these containers work well and seem to be of a relatively pure material, but I don’t have the full suite of instrumentation to do a complete analysis. Some of the main contaminants you might expect in silicone polymers are cyclosiloxanes and unreacted precursors. Those contaminants would be difficult to detect with my equipment, especially at low levels. However, other common chemicals that many people are aware of, such as BPA and phthalates, should be detected by my equipment and were not found in these containers.
J. Weber –
great for babies or anyone
I’m using these for my grandkids. I like the ease of portion control, especially with a sweeter snack. It seems to work well with a prefilled container rather than them seeing the larger bag and asking for more. Of course, these would be excellent for parents who prepare their own baby foods. They are excellent for any storage or portion control. At first I thought the tray that the 4 containers sit in was not necessary. Actually using the containers made me change my mind. It’s VERY handy to pull out the snack tray, it’s handy for the grandkids to put the containers back in the tray and I don’t worry about small loose containers in the fridge. So, good call OXO! You can freeze and heat foods in these silicone containers. I haven’t done that yet but having the option to is an add on to the usefulness of the product. All things considered, including the excellent reputation OXO has this set is a winner!