Guest guest Posted September 24, 2003 Report Share Posted September 24, 2003 Jody, I would be interested in the chicken salad recipe with avocado. I'm trying to get my son to eat avocados. Have you ever thought of doing some sort of diet consulting? You're obviously one of those people that can look into a refrigerator and " see " a gourmet meal wheras I just see " leftovers " . It's a gift that I don't have. I initially joined Elaine's children at the beginning of the year and tried the diet with my 5 year old son for several weeks. He became bloated and I eventually gave up and started back adding in limited carbs like cream of buckwheat and brown rice. From there we got some millet bread from Deland's bakery and it was quite a treat for him to finally eat bread again for the first time in almost 2 years. I would really like to see my son healed though and nothing seems to have worked so far (GFCF did almost nothing for him) so I'm back here again. Also my 2 year old's recurrent diarrhea is back again & one day I noted that her lunch passed through into her stool in 6 hours! If anything I really NEED to try SCD with her but she's going to be an even more difficult case as she attends a Jewish preschool and all food that is brought in to the school has to be kosher. (I'm at a loss as I'm not Jewish and my pots aren't Kosher). If anyone knows any good recipes for a picky eater that is deathly allergic to peanuts, mildly allergic to pecans (both IgE) & intolerant (IgG) to pumpkin, (I suspect butternut squash which we lived on when SCD before), mustard, egg (+3), sesame, most nuts(+1 to +2), canola, citrus, tomato, peas, etc PLEASE let me know. I haven't had the heart to check the 2 year old for allergies but her lunch and snack for school have to be kosher and we avoid peanuts for her as well. Thanks, Vicki Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 24, 2003 Report Share Posted September 24, 2003 Hi Joyce, The problem with almonds is not really a problem at all. You can use any other nut that your daughter doesn't react to. I use walnuts, cashews and pecans a lot, not because of allergy, but because I like the taste better. (I cannot use peanuts because my younger son is allergic to them.) Eggs are a more complicated problem because eggs serve more than one purpose in baking. The best egg substitute that I have come up with is using gelatin and extra baking soda. If your daughter can tolerate gelatin, let me know and I will post the directions for using gelatin instead of eggs. In recipes that call for mayonnaise, I just subsitute avocado. It makes a really delicious chicken salad. Jody mom to -4.9 and -7.0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 24, 2003 Report Share Posted September 24, 2003 Vicki, Is it possible for you to separate out for us the foods that were reactive on the IgE test vs. the IgG test? Also, do you know of a really good link that explains what is kosher and what is not? I am not Jewish and the kosher snacks/lunch would be impossible for me to even begin to guess at. I am sure that we can think of something though. I just need to understand the possible foods I can choose from. Jody Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 24, 2003 Report Share Posted September 24, 2003 Hi Jody, The nuts (peanuts & pecans) were the IgE and all other allergies were IgG (nuts, pumpkin, mustard, peas, canola, egg, rice, etc). I seem to recall that Elaine doesn't think much of the IgG food allergies. Also, we see Dr Hicks and he allows us to have +1 and +2 intolerances no more often than every 4th day. The one +3 was egg and he said to avoid for 6 months (which we have) and then every 4th day. I'm not Jewish either, but I think you can't combine meat and dairy. The biggest problem is that my pots aren't kosher. I think a rabbi has to do that? I don't know. Maybe someone else on the list knows. They will allow us to bring in cupcakes for birthday so maybe I could send muffins made from almond flour for snack. (My son is the one with the nut issues & allergy tests. He doesn't attend the same school and have the kosher issues. He's also my picky, picky eater). I try to rotate their foods every 4th day so the list won't get any longer, but I suppose she could eat a muffin each day or maybe Monday and Friday which leaves me Wednesday to come up with a suitable snack. (She attends the little Jewish preschool on M-W-F) I could send fruit but I don't know if they'll let me bring cooked fruit because of the pot issue. Basically, I need a 4 day menu that I can rotate. My son takes his lunch to school which is usually leftovers from the previous dinner and a snack. If I could come up with 4 meals + 4 snacks that travel well I might be able to do it. I'm wondering why he had such problems with bloating when I tried this diet earlier in the year. I'm pretty sure I gave it nearly 3 months. Of course we also had taken bethanechol which he did really poorly on so maybe that had something to do with it. I'm desperate enough that I'll give it another try especially since my youngest is having so many problems with diarrhea. It sure was nice to have millet bread so we could take short weekend trips again. Sorry for all the rambling. Long day here......... Vicki Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2003 Report Share Posted September 25, 2003 Vicki, Don't give up on the idea of weekend trips just because the millet bread is out. I use pancakes made in a 7 inch skillet (so the pancakes are uniform in size) and I make sandwiches using them. We just have round sandwiches. I suppose you could get one of those really small square skillets if your kids insist on square bread. I don't think that Elaine totally dismisses the IgG allergy tests, but it seems to me that she considers them to be a sign of gut malfunction rather than a good judge of what foods kids are actually allergic to. Since most kids have high scores to foods that they eat a lot, it shows that they are having leaky gut problems and that their bodies have made antibodies to the foods that they consume a lot. Food particles are getting out of the intestine and into the body where they are seen as " invaders " . I think her idea is that once you stop the complex carbs and you stop the leaky gut, you will stop the reactions to the foods that showed up on the IgG test because there will no longer be food particles leaking into their systems. No more " invaders " = no more IgG reactions. Can Kosher food be cooked in glass? If so, why don't you go to WalMart or someplace and purchase one Pyrex stove top pot? That way you could cook your daughter's food for preschool in it and you could bake fruit (and other stuff) for her in a pyrex baking dish as well. Since the preschool has the Kosher rule about food brought in, I think they they would have to be able to provide you with a list of rules that need to be followed. Once you get a list of rules from them, you could post them and I am sure that we can come up with some ideas. Jody Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2003 Report Share Posted September 25, 2003 mamommy2001@... wrote: > ...she attends a Jewish preschool and all food that is brought in to the > school has to be kosher. (I'm at a loss as I'm not Jewish and my pots > aren't Kosher). You mean they don't allow any homemade food, only commercial packaged food with a kosher certification on the label? What, do they check each kid's lunch to make sure it only contains foods in sealed packages with a kosher symbols? Because if they're allowing parents to send along homemade food then there's no guarantee whatsoever that only kosher food will be sent in. -- Deanna -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2003 Report Share Posted September 25, 2003 Jody G. momtobandj@... wrote: > Also, do you know of a really good link that explains what is kosher and > what is not? http://www.ou.org/kosher/primer.html -- Deanna -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2003 Report Share Posted September 25, 2003 mamommy2001@... wrote: > I'm not Jewish either, but I think you can't combine meat and dairy. Yes, and the meat and dairy each need to be kosher on their own. > The biggest problem is that my pots aren't kosher. I think a rabbi has to > do that? Not all non-kosher pots and utensils can be made kosher. It depends on what they're made out of and how they're used. For those that can be kashered, it's a good idea to consult a qualified rabbi for technical guidance but it is not necessary for a rabbi to do the actual kashering, just someone who is observant and knowledgeable. To make an entire kitchen kosher is an enormous undertaking and requires commitment on the part of the family to carefully maintaining the kashrus of the kitchen, necessitating a great deal of practical knowledge of the kosher rules in order to deal with all of the complexities. > They will allow us to bring in cupcakes for birthday Do they specify that the cupcakes must be the prepackaged kind with a kosher symbol or that they must come from a kosher bakery? Or do they allow homemade ones? -- Deanna -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2003 Report Share Posted September 25, 2003 Jody G. momtobandj@... wrote: > Can Kosher food be cooked in glass? Kosher food can be cooked in any kind of utensil, as long as that utensil has only been used for kosher food - meat if it's a meat utensil, dairy if it's a dairy utensil. > If so, why don't you go to WalMart or someplace and purchase one Pyrex > stove top pot? That way you could cook your daughter's food for preschool > in it The spoon for stirring the pot would also have to be kosher. > and you could bake fruit (and other stuff) for her in a pyrex baking dish > as well. The oven would have to be kosher, and the utensils would have to be washed separately from non-kosher utensils, with separate sponges, scrubbies, towels, etc. -- Deanna -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2003 Report Share Posted September 25, 2003 Deanna, Thanks for explaining things. I was just thinking that maybe she could go out and get one stovetop pan and one oven pan and use them only for making kosher food to be sent to pre-school with her daughter. I was thinking that by getting a glass pan it would be easy to keep it separate from her other pans and easy for other family members to NOT use for other things. I hadn't thought about the utensils. Maybe she could buy some a different color from the ones she usually uses. That way they could be easily identified and stored separately. Thanks for the link. I will read it tomorrow. Jody Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2003 Report Share Posted September 25, 2003 Deanna, Actually they serve the meals there. My biggest problem is their lunches are really heavy into carbs. I already provide her snacks because of the gluten/casein free issues but if I put her on SCD I'll have to find other snacks that I can send . They nearly always have a fruit and vegetable with lunch and that's what they've been giving her. Some days it's french fries, etc though. I may have to pick her up before lunch which cuts into both of our days. They really restrict what can be brought in because of the Kosher issue or I would just send her a lunch each day like I do with my son. Vicki Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2003 Report Share Posted December 23, 2003 Someone in my boat! My son is allergic to eggs too and this has been a hard thing to work around so far (9 days into this diet). Some people here (on the Lyris board) gave me some great suggestions that I'm passing on to you. First, The staples for my guy are meat and veggies and slowly introducing fruits and nuts as we go. There are recipes on pecanbread.com that have egg-free recipes. My son likes the peanut butter cookie recipe and the almond flour recipe as well as the muffin recipe in BTVC. The key to the baked goods that I got which helps is: 1/2 cup pureed fruit (banana, apple, pear, etc.) for each egg BUT you also have to add some extra flour to make it the right consistency AND here's the important one: you have to cook it at a lower temperature for a lot longer than the recipe calls for and be oh-so-patient! I think I ruined probably 6 recipes before I figured out what I was doing wrong AND I still can't make pancakes that work out. It takes a lot more time without eggs but it's worth it if they like something you make. Good luck. Feel free to email me offline. I'm not an expert but I can help you with the ones that have worked for me and the new ones I'm working on. Sondra steviesarasmom@... > I'm at the breaking point with my son's gut issues. He must have a > colonoscopy on Jan. 15th with Dr. Krigsman. My son's bm's often come > out as pure liquid. I think the diet is his only hope to heal his > gut. However, he is allergic to eggs. So many of the recipies that > look good for giving kids a treat contain eggs. It does not appear > that egg substitutes are legal. Any feedback on how to get around > the egg issue and/or Dr. Krigsman experiences would be really > helpful. Many thanks, mom to 4.3 year old autistic. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2003 Report Share Posted December 23, 2003 If anyone has a secret to making egg free pancakes turn out, I'd love to hear it. Thanks, Re: Egg allergy Someone in my boat! My son is allergic to eggs too and this has been a hard thing to work around so far (9 days into this diet). Some people here (on the Lyris board) gave me some great suggestions that I'm passing on to you. First, The staples for my guy are meat and veggies and slowly introducing fruits and nuts as we go. There are recipes on pecanbread.com that have egg-free recipes. My son likes the peanut butter cookie recipe and the almond flour recipe as well as the muffin recipe in BTVC. The key to the baked goods that I got which helps is: 1/2 cup pureed fruit (banana, apple, pear, etc.) for each egg BUT you also have to add some extra flour to make it the right consistency AND here's the important one: you have to cook it at a lower temperature for a lot longer than the recipe calls for and be oh-so-patient! I think I ruined probably 6 recipes before I figured out what I was doing wrong AND I still can't make pancakes that work out. It takes a lot more time without eggs but it's worth it if they like something you make. Good luck. Feel free to email me offline. I'm not an expert but I can help you with the ones that have worked for me and the new ones I'm working on. Sondra steviesarasmom@... > I'm at the breaking point with my son's gut issues. He must have a > colonoscopy on Jan. 15th with Dr. Krigsman. My son's bm's often come > out as pure liquid. I think the diet is his only hope to heal his > gut. However, he is allergic to eggs. So many of the recipies that > look good for giving kids a treat contain eggs. It does not appear > that egg substitutes are legal. Any feedback on how to get around > the egg issue and/or Dr. Krigsman experiences would be really > helpful. Many thanks, mom to 4.3 year old autistic. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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