I don't know what else to feed her anymore. I had a limited choice to begin with because she lost the taste for so many foods she used to love. But now the ones I could always count on..she is losing interest in now. I don't know what else to feed her. Any suggestions?
The other thing is don't force feed. It's an example on the opposite end, but I still remember my ex complaining that I didn't make our kids completely clean their plates.
While my husband was on hospice some days he ate almost normally and other days all he ate was half a grape Popsicle and some ginger ale. If you haven't already, discuss her needs with the hospice nurse.
Hugs to you.
msdaizy, since your mother is in her nineties and has dementia, I think I wouldn't be overly concerned about balanced nutrition. Sweet and salty are two flavors that elders can still taste. Unless she has congestive heart failure or high blood pressure I'd offer her salty things. What my husband enjoyed even when he was "not hungry" was milkshakes. I added a Carnation Breakfast envelope for more calories and some nutrients and often I'd add fruit (canned peaches were welcome) or something else. Peanut butter and banana are nice added to chocolate shakes. Toward the end his favorite food was soft scrambled eggs topped with salsa and nacho cheese sauce. Small portions tend to be more successful than an amount that seems reasonable to us but overwhelming to them.
Bookworm had some helpful tips. Keep experimenting until you find something she likes. And don't worry if she eats it every day.
One other consideration -- is she possibly in the final stage? When life is drawing to a close and the body is beginning to shut down it doesn't need food and insisting on feeding someone in that situation is not helpful. If your mother is in this state I highly recommend hospice care.
But assuming that she is just losing interest in food, keep experimenting to find something she'll tolerate.
He had a stroke and now the limited food that he liked, has narrowed down more. He now doesn't like sweetened food like barbecued sauce meat, etc...Our main staple food is not potatoes but rice. He would complain that the rice is too dry and he might choke on it.
I have found this past year to mix his food with variety. I still give rice but I now mix it with a creamy soup. I still won't salt our food but I would counter the blandness by adding some pickled asparagus (he still loves it), spinach and whatever meat I'm serving. On the side, I put a large amount of catsup for him. He dips his asparagus in this, and I've also seen him spoon the catsup and put it in his soup. I try not to watch him eat because I'm not crazy about catsup.
What I'm trying to say is that since our tastes buds are different from our parents, you will need to try New food. Concentrate on sour (adds a zing to the taste buds) and sweet (the catsup). Unfortunately, you're going to have to do this by trial and error since your mom's taste buds has changed. I've also found that if I present his food in a nice pretty way (not dumped in) and is pleasing to the look, he will eat it. I once was in a hurry and dumped it all in. He looked at it and said that it was slop - for the dog - and he's not eating it. Sigh....Oh, by the way, I tried grinding his food, but he didn't like it either because it was too boring to eat it that way. So: Contrasting Flavor of Food, Presentation, and Different Texture of the food. Hope this helps, book