From a public health standpoint, I'd agree that once that bottle has been in the baby's mouth, it's colonized by the baby's oral bacteria. I'd suggest discarding anything actually left in the bottle after about one hour. Yet this is such a typical pattern, to have the entree and then wait a little while for dessert.
For this reason, like others, I suggest small amounts at a time for actual warming. I surely can't predict how much a baby will take at one feed. An ounce here, two ounces there, four the next time...<g>
However a compromise would be to have a container of thawed EBM _cold_ in the fridge. Refill the nursing bottle from the clean bottle (just like you refill your glass from the milk container or jug, you don't drink directly from it).
I checked Lawrence, Riordan & Auerbach and the current BF Answering Book and all are silent on this issue.
Also as others said, warm, cold, cool, babies often don't care.
Judith
Judith A. Hayman, RN, BSc, BScN, IBCLC
Public Health Nurse, Lactation Consultant
Haldimand-Norfolk Health Unit
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