I personally didn't aim to replace a bottle with milk or to offer food along with milk (I think to some extent, that's outdated advice from when there was a push to wean babies earlier and cut out milk earlier, which isn't really the recommendation now). For us, milk feeds were milk feeds and they still happened whenever she wanted them, which was pretty much the same times as they always had for the first maybe 3-4 months of weaning. We started at 6 months and she dropped her nighttime feed at 9 months and then the daytime ones moved around a bit at about 10 months because she just wasn't hungry for the mid-morning one anymore, so I moved it to after lunch when she was hungry. Otherwise, all that stayed exactly the same for pretty much 4 months. What changed is I added in solid food about 1-2 hours after a milk feed, which was at roughly regular meal times. She already had milk when she woke up at about 6-7am, 10am, 4pm, and 7pm for bedtime. So I kept those as always until she lost interest in them, and added in lunch at around 12-1pm, then eventually breakfast at 8am and dinner at about 5pm.
So they didn't really compete with each other at all (but it does mean you spend a lot of your day feeding something, whether it's milk or food, which doesn't actually change as they get older, between meals and snacks my toddler still eats every 2-3 hours). When my daughter stopped being interested in the morning milk feed (the one at 10am), I moved it to about 1-2pm after lunch and before her afternoon nap, then when she woke, she'd either have a bit more milk (as she was used to having milk at around 4pm before dinner) or eventually that feed got replaced by a snack. So by 11 months, it looked more like milk feeds at 7am, 2pm, and 7pm, then breakfast, lunch, afternoon snack around 4, followed by dinner. Basically, she lost interest in the milk on her own or after a year, it would fill her up so much she had no interest in eating her meal. This happened with the early morning milk feed. By about 13 months, she wouldn't eat breakfast after she'd had that milk. She still had milk in the afternoon and evening and generally ate well, so I cut that feed out and went straight to breakfast. I wouldn't do that with a younger baby unless they are having loads and loads of milk, but I was comfortable with it once she was a bit older.
So I don't know if that made sense, but basically, I'd keep your milk feeds on demand, same as they've always been. They probably have a fairly reliable pattern to them at this point. And then aim to slot in solid food meals around those. We started with lunch too for the first month, then added in dinner by 7 months and breakfast by 7.5 months. In time, things will change and your LO will take in more solids and be less interested in milk. I just followed that lead.