I am a Ex chef of the rich and famous.
A celiac for 7 years now.
WHAT I AM DOING NOW:
*Going to restaurants and business and teaching their staff, prepare and serve gluten free meals.
courses at a local college.
*Making all my own celiac food from scratch.
*Helping others to work out there problems involving food.
**GOAL:To teach my knowledge to every one who needs it so they can go on a trip or out to a restaurant and not fear the GLUTEN FOOD MONSTER Celiac.com 05/05/2008 - We have all had our terrible times
at a restaurant. It doesn't matter if it is your local diner or a 5 Star
restaurant--it is hard to have somebody make our food if the smallest crumb can
make you sick, then ruin your day or week. With a little preparation on your
part, you can go on a cruise or dine on food made for a king or queen.
Preparing for Your Travel
The most important part of any travel is to prepare for it. If you are like our
family you search for a fare that the family can afford. You also have to
go the extra step for your food. “PLEASE REMEMBER I GET VERY SICK FROM THE
SMALLEST CRUMB SO I GOT TO BE SO CAREFUL OR I AM SICK FOR 5 DAYS.” Not
every one is like me but I am one of the worst cases so I have to be extra
careful. Judge for yourself and decide what you can handle and how extreme you
need to be.
When you are looking for a place to sleep if you are booking your motels ahead
of time it is nice to try to get a microwave and refrigerator in your room.
Most chains have a few rooms with microwaves in them so ask for it. During our
trip to
Don’t forget to ask, especially if you are staying at a resort or a hotel with
restaurant, whether they have a gluten-free menu. Not every restaurant
knows about the "Gluten Monster." Eventually we will get out the word
and the world will cook for us.
One time when we were traveling we found a little deli that was just across
from the hotel and they prepared gluten free-food if you ordered a day
ahead. My wife ordered some gluten-free bread sticks for our
dinner. We picked them up and brought them to dinner. The restaurant
didn’t have a problem with this and they said that for the next meal they would
have someone pick up our food from there if we wished.
Perform Internet searches for the area where you will be staying and look for any
advertised gluten-free restaurants or health food stores. Also check to see if
there is a local celiac group. The local celiac support group will know
of restaurants and stores in that and can make other important suggestions.
You can find some of this info right here at celiac.com. The celiac
groups can be reached by email and they will know of all the important information
that you can use during a trip to their area. This also goes for any trips
outside the
You should be prepared for your trip. You know where you’re staying and you
already have got some contacts with fellow celiacs in the area and where you
can eat. Let’s start by getting your paper work ready.
If you have to drive I found it very easy to stop at a fast food place.
The kids like it and if you haven’t noticed most of them keep it very clean and
that is very important to us. Ask for your food to be made fresh. Even at fast food restaurants mistakes can
happen and if you ask for a salad right from the counter it could have bread on
it. They will prepare your food fresh if you ask and be nice and tell
them you have a special diet and you will get very sick from a crumb.
Ask for the manager at this fast food place to help you. The manager is
going to be someone who has worked at the restaurant longer than a week and
will care more. Again tell them you have a special diet request and you
could get very ill if you vary a crumb. It’s a crap shoot that the
manager might prepare your food or will tell some one to make it for you.
When you go to the fast food place you don’t have to eat salads only. I
go and ask for “Double burger with cheese and lettuce, tomatoes, onions.”
No sauces, catsup, mustard, mayo or pickles. Ask for the packets that are
for to go and you can read what the ingredients are in them. I ask them
to prepare it for me and I watch to make sure they use a clean fork that I hand
them or if they put fresh gloves on. With these fast food restaurants you can
see all the way to the back and I love that. Order some French fries if you
know they are gluten-free and you’re on your way. Make sure if you do order
French fries that they only cook French fries in that fryer and they cook
nothing else in them. If you eat at any restaurant you must ask them if they
are made in a dedicated fryer.
Some fast food places have chicken breast and other food so again, you don’t
just have to eat salads. If you don’t stop at a fast food place and it is not on your
list of gluten-free places you should get out one of your “Chef Daniel Letters”
to give to the chefs in the back. Be prepared to wait longer. When
you arrive ask the waiter or matre’d if they have a gluten-free menu.
If they have gluten-free menu that is great but the gluten-free menus I have
seen don’t give the restaurant its due. They just put a few items on the
menu like salad and a steak and expect that to feed everyone…WRONG. Chef
Daniel wants to eat what I want not what they tell me what I can eat. I
mean if my wife can have chicken, pork, shrimp, lobster, lamb and that entire
menu why can I only get three things? I AM A BIG BOY…one of my pet peeves is
this limited choices offered by most gluten-free menus.
It is so much easier to talk with the manager when you come in and explain that
you have a special diet request and you will get very ill than it is to explain
it to the wait staff who have 12 tables and could care less about you because
the manager is yelling at them to get to the next table or that an order is up.
If you don’t order from the gluten free menu and you see something else on it
you might like you have to ask questions:
When you decide what you are eating I like to put down on the paper exactly how
to cook my food (Chef Daniel P. form). Do I want it pan fried or broiled? If I
have it broiled I ask them to steel brush the grill. Your Chef Daniel
slip should ask them to use a fresh tong, knives, cutting board and even a
fresh cloth if they wipe your plate. I give them as much
direction I can think of so they know I am very serious about my special diet
and that if prepared wrong in any way I will get very ill.
Real World Here
I have gone to a restaurant and did everything I said--triple checked and
the salad came out with croutons on it. I am polite to the wait staff and tell
them again that I can’t have any bread on my salad. Then I gave it back to the
wait staff and sat and waited for a new salad and I received the salad I JUST
GAVE THEM TO TAKE BACK and they simply took the croutons off the salad and
brought it right back to me!
Don’t be afraid to say “Hey you just brought me the same salad back and I can
see the crumbs from the croutons.” Oh yeah that is a true story. Check your
food carefully when it comes out to you. If you see the tiniest piece of
something that doesn’t look right say NO WAY. You order a steak and you
see a bit of carrot on it THAT PROBALLY MEANS HE USED TONGS THAT HE USED TO
PICK UP CARROTS WITH. The carrots are not on your plate. My wife has to
deal with me when we go out to eat but I have no choice because the smallest
crumb takes me out for four days. I’d rather go hungry then get sick. When that
salad came out I gave them one chance and if they don’t do it right I don’t
take the chance with the local “hot head” cook to get one over on me. I
POLITLY SAY “NO THANK YOU, I DON’T WANT TO EAT HERE ANYMORE” . It’s my
money, my health and sadly, during the subsequent four days that I am sick they
don’t care about me, so I’d rather get some cheese or chips or something simple.
In these cases I leave the restaurant and they take my food off of the bill
because I don’t eat a thing.
So always have an alternative plan if you can’t eat. My wife and kids can
eat but if I don’t feel the right vibe in the restaurant I must move on, and you
should to. It’s not hard for any restaurant to make a burger and fries
for the family so let them eat and you move on to plan B. Again each
person’s tolerance is different so you have to make up your mind but it is your
trip and your health.
When you are on the road you have to choose your restaurant and always have a
plan B. I choose the fast food because I can watch them make my food. You
might like to be pampered so pick a nice restaurant and try to make sure it is
not during peak hours--this will help a lot.
I hope this is Helpful
Chef Daniel P.
I will continue with staying at hotels and motels in my next article.