A.,
For whatever it is worth, when my son was at the baby food stage, we were so poor that we could not afford baby food. What I did was to acquire a small chest freezer, obtain used (clean of course) baby food jars from my neighbors, and then obtain whatever fruits or vegetables were in season either in my garden or on special at the grocery store.
Some of the best were squash, green beans, peas, beets, and pumpkin for the vegetables, and apples, pears and peaches for fruits.
For squash and pumpkin, cut up and clean out the seeds and strings. Steam until tender. Scoop the flesh out of the rind and pulverize in the blender, along with some of the liquid used to steam it, until it is the texture that you want. You can do the same with beets.
For green beans and peas (can use fresh or frozen), steam until tender and grind in the blender, along with some steaming liquid if necessary, until it is the texture that you want.
You can do the same with fruits, but what I found worked really well was to take some of my home-bottled applesauce (already prepared) or home-bottled peaches, apricots, or pears, rinse off the syrup, and blend them to the right consistency. If you use fresh fruit, be sure to blanch (steam cook for 2 to 3 min.) it before freezing so that enzyme activity stops while the fruit is frozen. Otherwise, you will end up with colorless, flavorless, non-nutritious junk. (Been there done that - learn from my experience.)
After the fruit/vegetable is blended, pour the puree into your clean babyfood jars, cap, and freeze.
To use the baby food, remove from the freezer several hours before you plan to feed the baby (yes, you do have to do a little meal planning) and thaw in the refrigerator. You can also place the bottle of frozen food in a pan of hot water to thaw it more quickly. Do not use a microwave; purees can develop uneven hot spots that can burn your baby's mouth.
The advantages of making your own babyfood are many: You can control the ingredients that go into the food and ensure that your baby is getting good, wholesome, real food without additives and fillers. YOur baby can eat what you are eating. Making it is cheaper than buying it. And, as a fringe benefit, your baby will grow up loving vegetables rather than spitting them out and hating them. Especially peas. (Have you ever tasted baby food peas? They are seriously nasty. Any wonder little kids grow up hating veggies. You would, too, if you had that junk crammed down your throat every day.)
Just as evidence of that, on one occasion, my friend, who was tending my son, attempted to feed him some name-brand strained peas that her son had outgrown. My son was used to eating pureed fresh and frozen vegetables. The commercial peas must have been pretty nasty because he spit them out all over my friend, screamed bloody murder for the next hour, and glared at her for the rest of the afternoon. She never did that again.
Good luck and best wishes.
Linda