Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Applebee's


Lisa

Recommended Posts

Lisa Mentor

Today we had lunch at Applebee's as I watched my husband eat what I wanted to, I ordered a Ceasar Salad (without the Croutons). I asked the manager if it was made with distilled vineager and he came back and said that all their salad dressing were made with distilled vineager. So, I chomped down, while drooling at my husbands plate.

Three hours later I had the bad stomach girgles and a lengthly bathroom visit.

Although still healing after two months, this also may come from the ruffage being not suitable to a damaged intestine.

Has anyone eaten a Ceasar Salad with parm. cheese at Applebee's and had a problem?

Welcome a response.

Lisa B.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



VegasCeliacBuckeye Collaborator

Did you ask for dressing on the side?

If you just asked for no croutons, they will toss your salad in the same bowl as the ones that are tossed with the croutons. That will make you sick.

Dressing on the side always (or toss it in a clean bowl -- but I am rarely that trusting)

Hope this helps...

zakismom Newbie

I did not have a great response to Applebee's. My coworkers and I were to have lunch together for a going away party and they were all ordering from there. I called ahead and asked to speak with the manager to ask if there was anything appropriate for me to eat there. She was totally clueless so I had my lunch from another place. I checked their website when I got home and they don't have any list of ingrediants for any of their meals and their official response to my e-mail was that they get their supplies from too many different sources to be able to accurately tell what is in each dish. :blink: I won't be eating there myself.

Guest barbara3675

When you go to Appleby's order the grilled salmon, which comes with rice and a veggie and specifically tell them no sauce or seasonings. I have ordered it several times and carefully explained why/no sauce. I have felt fine afterwards. However, the Applebys that I go to/the manager has a child with allergies and they are a little more sensitive there. You must speak up and make sure the sever understands your needs.

Barbara

Lisa Mentor

Thanks for your input. I am still in the beginning stages of deal with eating out.

I used to LOVE it, but now, it's better if I eat at home......that's the pitts. I have been a far better cook than any restaurant that I have been to locally. So the money that is being saved from eating out, should go to my grocery money....don't you'all thing. Probly sooooooooo.

We live in a small town and everyone meets at a local grill/restaurant and we talk and eat and see lots of folks. I usually order a hamburger, cheese, lettuce, onion, hold the bun and a baked potato. That seems to carry me.

Next time, if there is one, I will order the grillled salmon.

I love this when you can bounce off others experiences...........I guess that's what we all are about.

Thanks Barbara

2Boys4Me Enthusiast

Lisa, I wonder if it might have been the dressing.

I make homemade chicken caesars all the time, but use store bought dressings and have only found one w/o wheat as an ingredient. We don't have any Applebee's so I have no idea what they use for dressing.

LLCoolJD Newbie

Caesar Salad dressing usually has wheat, doesn't it? I suspect that is what caused your problem. Having worked at Applebee's for a spell, I have to say that they don't have much in the way of gluten free food on the menu. Their desserts are really awesome, too, which is a bit frustrating.... Anyway, some of the steaks (Applebee's has bad steaks, I've found) and maybe the grilled salmon without seasoning (as someone mentioned) might be gluten-free if you could get them prepared carefully.

You have to realize, though, that everything is cooked on the same grill. And don't expect the kitchen to be able to handle such a special order during a hectic lunch or a weekend rush. If you want a special order to be followed, it'd be safer to go in to a restaurant for an early (11:15-ish) mid-week lunch, when the grill has been cleaned and the kitchen isn't very busy. It's much more pleasant to dine when it's quiet, anyway.

The only thing I can think of from Applebee's that I'd feel safe eating would be a no-crouton house salad w/oil and vinegar, and garlic mashed potatoes (probably a double order of those). That's not a large meal by any stretch of the imagination, but throw in a cup of coffee, and it'd work for a lunch.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



minamoe Newbie

I am new to the whole gluten free diet thing, I was just diagnosed 2 weeks ago, but I am also a Wweight Watchers member and know that places lie about their dressings being fat free...so unless you explain your condition to them, they most likely lie about the dressings and their ingredients as well. I ate the riblets without sauce and had no problems. That was the first time I've eaten out and not gotten sick in almost 2 years.

Today we had lunch at Applebee's as I watched my husband eat what I wanted to, I ordered a Ceasar Salad (without the Croutons).  I asked the manager if it was made with distilled vineager and he came back and said that all their salad dressing were made with distilled vineager.  So, I chomped down, while drooling at my husbands plate.

Three hours later I had the bad stomach girgles and a lengthly bathroom visit.

Although still healing after two months, this also may come from the ruffage being not suitable to a damaged intestine.

Has anyone eaten a Ceasar Salad with parm. cheese at Applebee's and had a problem?

Welcome a response.

Lisa B.

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>

  • 7 years later...
shawnalava Newbie

I work at applebees so I can tell you how he salads are prepared. Tossing the salad is not an issue for 2 reasons. First, the cooks toss the salad in single use plastic bags in which the lettuce was originally portioned. They throw the dressing in there, put some air in the bag and toss it around. Second, croutons are added at the end, so they'd never be tossed in the first place.

That being said something about the salad is not gluten free. It glutens me every time. Even when i make the salad myself, fresh gloves, I open new containers of dressing and cheese and get my own lettuce from the back.

I've come to the conclusion that the parm cheese is not gluten free, or causes a reaction for some reason. It's on the gluten free menu in one place and that's on the napa chicken and portobellos, but I still don't believe it. Every time I eat this shaved parm cheese on anything, I get glutened.

Next time, try the salad with chicken and dressing only and it's still pretty tasty. Hope this helps.

kareng Grand Master

Please note:  The original posts are from 2005.  I know Applebys has added a sort of gluten-free menu since then.

Juliebove Rising Star

I know this is an old post but two things come to mind.  One is...  What is the salad served in?  If it is a wooden bowl, that could be retaining gluten.  I don't like Applebees so will never darken their door again.  I honestly don't know how the salads come.

 

Another thing is that I have found salads to be a very unsafe item to order in a restaurant unless that restaurant has no croutons whatever in it.  There are a few that do not serve them at all.  I can't tell you how many times they forgot that I said "No croutons" and then thought it was good enough just to pick them off.  But I also have additional food problems such as not being able to have egg or dairy.  I have sometimes gotten a salad with egg on there even though the egg isn't listed.  Or gotten halfway through the salad and finding a shred of lettuce.

 

One reason I dislike Applebees is that so much of what they serve is glopped up with sauce of some kind.  I prefer going to places that offer at least some plain food.  Like fruit.  Or bacon.  Plain foods like that are usually safe, but you do have to order several different sides.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Join eNewsletter
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - Flash1970 replied to Ginger38's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      7

      Shingles - Could It Be Related to Gluten/ Celiac

    2. - trents replied to Roses8721's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      10

      GI DX celiac despite neg serology and no biopsy

    3. - Roses8721 replied to Roses8721's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      10

      GI DX celiac despite neg serology and no biopsy

    4. - Ginger38 replied to Ginger38's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      7

      Shingles - Could It Be Related to Gluten/ Celiac

    5. - Scott Adams replied to Silk tha Shocker's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      1

      Help


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,483
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    AML2013
    Newest Member
    AML2013
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):



  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):




  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):


  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Flash1970
      You might try Heallix.  It's a silver solution with fulvic acid. I just put the solution on with a cotton ball.  It seemed to stop the nerve pain. Again,  not in your eyes or ears.   Go to heallix.com to read more about it and decide for yourself Also,  I do think nerve and celiac combined have a lot to do with your susceptibility to shingles breaking out. 
    • trents
      Celiac disease requires both genetic potential and a triggering stress event to activate the genes. Otherwise it remains dormant and only a potential problem. So having the genetic potential is not deterministic for celiac disease. Many more people have the genes than actually develop the disease. But if you don't have the genes, the symptoms are likely being caused by something else.
    • Roses8721
      Yes, i pulled raw ancetry data and saw i have 2/3 markers for DQ2.2 but have heard from friends in genetics that this raw data can be wildly innacurate
    • Ginger38
      Thanks, I’m still dealing with the pain and tingling and itching and feeling like bugs or something crawling around on my face and scalp. It’s been a miserable experience. I saw my eye doc last week, the eye itself was okay, so they didn’t do anything. I did take a 7 day course of an antiviral. I’m hoping for a turnaround soon! My life is full of stress but I have been on / off the gluten free diet for the last year , after being talked into going back on gluten to have a biopsy, that looked okay. But I do have positive antibody levels that have been responsive  to a gluten free diet. I can’t help but wonder if the last year has caused all this. 
    • Scott Adams
      I don't think any apps are up to date, which is exactly why this happened to you. Most of the data in such apps is years old, and it doesn't get updated in real time. Ultimately there is no substitution for learning to read labels. The following two lists are very helpful for anyone who is gluten sensitive and needs to avoid gluten when shopping. It's very important to learn to read labels and understand sources of hidden gluten, and to know some general information about product labelling--for example in the USA if wheat is a possible allergen it must be declared on a product's ingredient label like this: Allergens: Wheat.      
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.