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

Celiac Coolking Regular For Whole Family


peter/southland

Recommended Posts

peter/southland Newbie

In my home I make all my gluten free meals on my own board and when

I have lunch I put my bread on a plate that has gone through the dish washer.

My problem is that I'm still having  problems, I am the main or I should say 

the only cook in the home were everyone else eats gluten bread prossesed meat

etc apart from the odd thing I have changed that is gluten free like sausages

and fresh fish.

My question is what  can I do to for myself to help, my wife was thinking about

desposable gloves when I make anything for the family ? I also work as a driver at

Pizza hut and what product I do handle has gluten in it including the seasoning on

the fries any ideas excluding quiting my job at the moment, I am looking for another

job but with my crook wife I can only work at night after dinner till late......


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



NoGlutenCooties Contributor

Hi Peter -

 

Are you also using your own strainer, toaster, etc. - anthing porus that can hang onto food particles?  I know some of the folks on here are advocates for having your own plastic storage containers too... but as long as you wash them well, that isn't necessary.  Any shared condiments (i.e. mayo, butter, peanut butter)?  As far as your work, as long as there isn't flour floating around in the air (and I think Pizza Hut uses frozen dough, right?) then the biggest things you have to worry about are touching your face with your hands, eating without washing your hands, or allowing your food (assuming you take a lunch/snack, etc.) to get cross-contaminated when you eat it.

 

Other than that... are there any other possible sources of contamination?  Pets?  Baking with regular flour?  Kids unknowingly contaminating your food?

nvsmom Community Regular

You could always make your home gluten-free since you are the cook. Use gluten-free noodles, bread, sauces and condiments.... It would be a lot safer and wouldn't hurt anyone. They can get their gluten fixes when out of the house.

peter/southland Newbie

You could always make your home gluten-free since you are the cook. Use gluten-free noodles, bread, sauces and condiments.... It would be a lot safer and wouldn't hurt anyone. They can get their gluten fixes when out of the house.

 

I have changed a lot of food brands for everyone to use with no complaining, some of the spreads
margarine etc even the brand of of sausages had the same flavor in gluten free so I changed it over

with out saying anything to the family for a month to there surprise they liked them they tasted the

same as the ones that had gluten in them. 

But there is no way that my picky wife and teenage boys would eat gluten free bread even tho they

will eat my gluten free baking I bake for myself :rolleyes:

 

peter/southland Newbie

Hi Peter -

 

Are you also using your own strainer, toaster, etc. - anthing porus that can hang onto food particles?  I know some of the folks on here are advocates for having your own plastic storage containers too... but as long as you wash them well, that isn't necessary.  Any shared condiments (i.e. mayo, butter, peanut butter)?  As far as your work, as long as there isn't flour floating around in the air (and I think Pizza Hut uses frozen dough, right?) then the biggest things you have to worry about are touching your face with your hands, eating without washing your hands, or allowing your food (assuming you take a lunch/snack, etc.) to get cross-contaminated when you eat it.

 

Other than that... are there any other possible sources of contamination?  Pets?  Baking with regular flour?  Kids unknowingly contaminating your food?

Yes I went out and brought my own toaster the next day some containers and I have the top shelf of the fridge, my step son has a couple of times

used my margarine or jam etc when he came over to visit every one was told that the top shelf in the fridge and sealed containers in the pantry were

mine so he copped an ear full from me and his mum.....

Pizza hut uses fresh pizza dough flour in New Zealand and I do have to walk passed it on a Friday and Saturday night as they usually have to make more dough to keep up with the orders, earlier this week I brought a small bottle of hand sanitiser when I had a flight up to Christchurch for my daughters wedding I am now using that before eating at work time will tell if it helps :)   

livinthelife Apprentice

 

I have changed a lot of food brands for everyone to use with no complaining, some of the spreads
margarine etc even the brand of of sausages had the same flavor in gluten free so I changed it over

with out saying anything to the family for a month to there surprise they liked them they tasted the

same as the ones that had gluten in them. 

But there is no way that my picky wife and teenage boys would eat gluten free bread even tho they

will eat my gluten free baking I bake for myself :rolleyes:

 

 

I made my kitchen gluten free. I figure I cook, so I get to choose. If I don't tell them that dinner is gluten free, they don't even know most of the time.

 

My family has a loaf of gluten bread and a couple of pots/pans they can use if they want to cook something. I keep all of this far from where I fix food. 

 

I've threatened them within an inch of their lives if they leave a crumb or don't wash a bowl because I've gotten sick from crumbs left on the counter top.

 

It can be frustrating finding hidden gluten but you'll figure it out!

NoGlutenCooties Contributor

If they make their own pizza dough, just be aware that flour can hang around in the air for hours (from what I've heard anyways - maybe someone else on here has heard differently?) - and if you breathe in the flour it gets to the back of your throat and you end up swallowing it.  So you don't want to walk in an area where there has been flour in the air.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



peter/southland Newbie

If they make their own pizza dough, just be aware that flour can hang around in the air for hours (from what I've heard anyways - maybe someone else on here has heard differently?) - and if you breathe in the flour it gets to the back of your throat and you end up swallowing it.  So you don't want to walk in an area where there has been flour in the air.

I usually stick to the front of shop and when busy I'm in and out doing deliveries and the dough mixer is at the back near the stock storage

I hardly cut pizza or even box the fries, onion rings etc to the disappointment to the other staff, but as I have told them I'm paid to deliver

it, not box and cut it other drivers help them but I don't any longer.........

peter/southland Newbie

I made my kitchen gluten free. I figure I cook, so I get to choose. If I don't tell them that dinner is gluten free, they don't even know most of the time.

 

My family has a loaf of gluten bread and a couple of pots/pans they can use if they want to cook something. I keep all of this far from where I fix food. 

 

I've threatened them within an inch of their lives if they leave a crumb or don't wash a bowl because I've gotten sick from crumbs left on the counter top.

 

It can be frustrating finding hidden gluten but you'll figure it out!

True :) I'm definitely going through the paper towels and hand sanitiser after cleaning down the kitchen again...... 

  • 3 weeks later...
peter/southland Newbie

I never thought about hand sanitisers having alcohol in them, I rang one of the companies

about it and the said that we do not add gluten into our products but then he said it alcohol

may have some.

Is it ok to use :huh:

GottaSki Mentor

Hi Peter!

 

The issue with hand sanitizers isn't that it contains gluten...washing with with gel hand sanitizer does not break down the protein of gluten -- where washing with soap and water does.  When available...good old soap and water is preferable -- but when out and about I do use hand sanitizer and/or plain water when that is all that is available. 

peter/southland Newbie

Ok good to know,

I'll have to go get some antibacterial soap tomorrow

thanks again.......

kareng Grand Master

Ok good to know,

I'll have to go get some antibacterial soap tomorrow

thanks again.......

Gluten can't be " killed" so regular soap is fine. It just needs to be washed off. Soap helps stuff like germs and dirt (like gluten ) slide off of skin or your car or dishes or whatever is dirty. There is a big technical explanation, but the simple one is that soap and rubbing and rinsing gets gluten off.

Open Original Shared Link

"It can do these things because one part of the soap molecule is hydrophilic (water-binding) and the other is hydrophobic (water-repellent). The hydrophilic part allows the hydrophobic fatty acids to come into contact with other hydrophobic substances, such as the dirt on the surface that is being cleaned. When the grime adheres to the soap's fatty acids, it becomes encapsulated in droplets of water. Dirt, oil and bacteria are easily scrubbed off and washed away in this suspended state. So ordinary soap does get rid of bacteria. But does antibacterial soap get rid of even more?"

peter/southland Newbie

Gluten can't be " killed" so regular soap is fine. It just needs to be washed off. Soap helps stuff like germs and dirt (like gluten ) slide off of skin or your car or dishes or whatever is dirty. There is a big technical explanation, but the simple one is that soap and rubbing and rinsing gets gluten off.

Open Original Shared Link

"It can do these things because one part of the soap molecule is hydrophilic (water-binding) and the other is hydrophobic (water-repellent). The hydrophilic part allows the hydrophobic fatty acids to come into contact with other hydrophobic substances, such as the dirt on the surface that is being cleaned. When the grime adheres to the soap's fatty acids, it becomes encapsulated in droplets of water. Dirt, oil and bacteria are easily scrubbed off and washed away in this suspended state. So ordinary soap does get rid of bacteria. But does antibacterial soap get rid of even more?"

Cheer for that......

w8in4dave Community Regular

I also do the cooking for my husband and I, I am Celiac, he is not. I use my pots and pans for my stuff, his pots and his utensils for his . When I cook I make sure the utensils do not ever touch and there is no cross contamination.I use seperate spoon rests. I have my colander and he has his. I am not a fan of bread anyway so I don't care about the toaster. When it comes to dishes I wash the dishes. I was my dishes 1st. separately , I will then wash his. I let the water run and make sure mine are washed with my gluten-free scrubber and rag. I also separate our laundry :) Cross contamination can be a very big issue. I never lay food on the counter. I always put it on a plate or platter. I have separate platters one for gluten one for non gluten. 

peter/southland Newbie

I also do the cooking for my husband and I, I am Celiac, he is not. I use my pots and pans for my stuff, his pots and his utensils for his . When I cook I make sure the utensils do not ever touch and there is no cross contamination.I use seperate spoon rests. I have my colander and he has his. I am not a fan of bread anyway so I don't care about the toaster. When it comes to dishes I wash the dishes. I was my dishes 1st. separately , I will then wash his. I let the water run and make sure mine are washed with my gluten-free scrubber and rag. I also separate our laundry :) Cross contamination can be a very big issue. I never lay food on the counter. I always put it on a plate or platter. I have separate platters one for gluten one for non gluten. 

I do the same sort of thing but I put my dishes through the dish washer with the rest of them

my laundry is usually washed on it's own when I've finished work for the week but I didn't think 

about cross contamination in the washing machine..... :blink:

shadowicewolf Proficient

I do the same sort of thing but I put my dishes through the dish washer with the rest of them

my laundry is usually washed on it's own when I've finished work for the week but I didn't think 

about cross contamination in the washing machine..... :blink:

That isn't something i worry about.

GottaSki Mentor

I do the same sort of thing but I put my dishes through the dish washer with the rest of them

my laundry is usually washed on it's own when I've finished work for the week but I didn't think 

about cross contamination in the washing machine..... :blink:

 

Ditto Shawdow

 

There is no reason to wash your clothing separately from your family.

w8in4dave Community Regular

I do the same sort of thing but I put my dishes through the dish washer with the rest of them

my laundry is usually washed on it's own when I've finished work for the week but I didn't think 

about cross contamination in the washing machine..... :blink:

I don't think CC is a big deal in the washing machine. It's just what I do. With cooking separately I just do it :) But I really don't think it's a big deal. The wash rags yes. I don't use the same rag on my dishes that I do his. But you have a dish washer so no worries! :) 

Archived

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

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

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





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - Hmart replied to Hmart's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      2

      Is this celiac?

    2. - trents replied to Hmart's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      2

      Is this celiac?

    3. - klmgarland replied to klmgarland's topic in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
      10

      Help I’m cross contaminating myself,

    4. - DebJ14 replied to Jhona's topic in Introduce Yourself / Share Stuff
      30

      Does anyone here also have Afib

    5. - Hmart posted a topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      2

      Is this celiac?


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,926
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    fr0gger03
    Newest Member
    fr0gger03
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Hmart
      I was not taking any medications previous to this. I was a healthy 49 yo with some mild stomach discomfort. I noticed the onset of tinnitus earlier this year and I had Covid at the end of June. My first ‘flare-up’ with these symptoms was in August and I was eating gluten like normal. I had another flare-up in September and then got an upper endo at the end of September that showed possible celiac. My blood test came a week later. While I didn’t stop eating gluten before I had the blood test, I had cut back on food and gluten both. I had a flare-up with this symptoms after one week of gluten free but wasn’t being crazy careful. Then I had another flare-up this week. I think it might have been caused by Trader Joe’s baked tofu which I didn’t realize had wheat. But I don’t know if these flare-ups are caused by gluten or if there’s something else going on. I am food journaling and tracking all symptoms. I have lost 7 pounds in the last 10 days. 
    • trents
      Welcome to the forum, @Hmart! There are other medical conditions besides celiac disease that can cause villous atrophy as well as some medications and for some people, the dairy protein casein. So, your question is a valid one. Especially in view of the fact that your antibody testing was negative, though there are also some seronegative celiacs. So, do you get reactions every time you consume gluten? If you were to purposely consume a slice of bread would you be certain to develop the symptoms you describe?
    • klmgarland
    • DebJ14
      I only went on the multi vitamin AFTER a couple of year of high dose, targeted supplementation resolved most of my deficiencies.  I was on quite a cocktail of vitamins that was changed every 6 months as my deficiencies resolved.  Those that were determined to be genetic are still addressed with specific doses of those vitamins, minerals and amino acids. I have an update on my husband and his A Fib.  He ended up in the hospital in August 2025 when his A Fib would not convert.  He took the maximum dose of Flecainide allowed within a 24 hour period.  It was a nightmare experience!  They took him into the ER immediately.  They put in a line, drew blood, did an EKG and chest Xray all within minutes.  Never saw another human for 6 hours.  Never got any results, but obviously we could see he was still in A fib by watching the monitor.  They have the family sign up for text alerts at the ER desk.  So glad I did.  That is the only way we found out that he was being admitted.  About an hour after that text someone came to take him to his room on an observation floor.  We were there two hours before we saw another human being and believe it or not that was by zoom on the TV in the room.  It was admissions wanting to know his vaccine status and confirming his insurance, which we provided at the ER desk.  They said someone would be in and finally a nurse arrived.  He was told a hospitalist was in charge of his case.  Finally the NP for the hospitalist showed up and my husband literally blew his stack.  He got so angry and yelled at this poor woman, but it was exactly what he needed to convert himself to sinus rhythm while she was there.  They got an EKG machine and confirmed it.  She told him that they wanted to keep him overnight and would do an echo in the morning and they were concerned about a wound on his leg and wanted to do a doppler to make sure he did not have a DVT.  He agreed.  The echo showed everything fine, just as it was at his annual check up in June and there was no DVT.  A cardiologist finally showed up to discharge him and after reviewing his history said the A Fib was due to the Amoxicillan prescribed for his leg wound.  It both triggers A Fib and prevents the Flecainide from working.  His conversion coincided with the last dose of antibiotic getting out of his system.  So, make sure your PCP understands what antibiotics you can or cannot take if susceptible to A Fib.  This cardiologist (not his regular) wanted him on Metoprolol 25 mg and Pradaxa.  My husband told him that his cardiologist axed the idea of a beta blocker because his heart rate is already low.  Sure enough, it dropped to 42 on the Metoprolol and my husband felt horrible.  The pradaxa gave him a full body rash!  He went back to his cardiologist for follow up and his BP was fine and heart rate in the mid 50's.  He also axed the Pradaxa since my husband has low platelets, bruises easily and gets bloody noses just from Fish Oil  He suggested he take Black Cumin Seed Oil for inflammation.  He discovered that by taking the Black Seed oil, he can eat carbs and not go into A Fib, since it does such a good job of reducing inflammation.   Oh and I forgot to say the hospital bill was over $26,000.  Houston Methodist!  
    • Hmart
      The symptoms that led to my diagnosis were stomach pain, diarrhea, nausea, body/nerve tingling and burning and chills. It went away after about four days but led me to a gastro who did an upper endo and found I had marsh 3b. I did the blood test for celiac and it came back negative.  I have gone gluten free. In week 1 I had a flare-up that was similar to my original symptoms. I got more careful/serious. Now at the end of week 2 I had another flare-up. These symptoms seem to get more intense. My questions:  1. How do I know if I have celiac and not something else? 2. Are these symptoms what others experience from gluten?  When I have a flare-up it’s completely debilitating. Can’t sleep, can’t eat, can’t move. Body just shakes. I have lost 10 pounds since going gluten free in the last two weeks.
×
×
  • 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.