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

New Restaurant...need Your Input!


wdceliaccafe

Recommended Posts

wdceliaccafe Newbie

Hello,

My husband and I are interesting in opening up a 100% gluten free pizza/full service menu restaurant in Southeast Michigan. Target open date is approximately 1-2 years but we are gathering as much information as we possibly can about Celiac disease and the people it affects. My husband and I do not have Celiac, but a very close friend of mine has a son who was diagnosed and it gave us the idea to create a place where people with Celiac could come and eat and enjoy themselves and order ANYTHING they want off the menu without having to worry about cross contamination.

We are in the early planning stages, but wanted to find out what types of things you would like to see in the restaurant? What types of menu items? What would be a concern for you eating out?

Any information or suggestions you could provide to help us out would be appreciated. My husband has a degree in Culinary Arts and is a wonderful cook, so any book recomendations or anything would be great. Due to a life changing event that has occured we are able to open up a restaurant (my husbands life long dream) and are really excited about it but realize this type of restaurant will present challenges to us, as there is so much information and we want to be sure we do everything right and have a place that people will feel comfortable coming to.... We have many great ideas and with the help of my friend are heading in the right direction, but every bit of input will help us.

Thanks for taking the time to read and respond to this and helping to make our dream of owning a gluten free restaurant become a reality!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



TinkerbellSwt Collaborator

Wow, this sounds great. can you come to NJ? I will have to think.. about things I would look for.. I am sure you will get lots of input.. it must be so exciting!

Sweetfudge Community Regular

Check out www.eatingglutenfree.com I keep telling these girls that they need to open a restaurant! Everything I've tried from the site has turned out great! Get their cookbook, it's my favorite! I'd love to be updated on your progress! I've thought about opening my own gluten-free restaurant. I thought about more of a cafe/bakery/pizza place, since most glutenous goodies I crave are baked goods. Hope it all goes well!

dionnek Enthusiast

My first suggestion is move it to Atlanta :)

Ok, second, if you are looking for books, I bought Danna Korn's Wheat Free Worry Free when I was diagnosed a year ago and thought it was great. Also, a lot of people recommend Peter Green's "Celiac Disease - A Hidden Epidemic" (I think that's what it's called) - Dr. Green is a well respected celiac dr.

As far as the food, pizza and beer would probably be a hit! Salads are easy - just skip croutons (you could make those little cheese crisp/cracker things to put on instead - those are yummy!) and you could even do breadsticks/calzone, etc. Tinkyada seems to be the most popular brand of gluten-free spaghetti around here, so you could use that to offer spaghetti/ziti, etc. Cross contamination is the main thing, so if you are also making anything with regular (gluten) flours, you would need to make sure it is in a separate part of the kitchen and you use separate pans, etc. Flour flies everywhere so you'd need to be really careful with that!

Good luck!

missy'smom Collaborator

This is my dream:

I would love good vegetable dishes and sauces without cream, fruit desserts. I'm not a steak, potatoe, salad kind of gal. I respect the skill that it takes to do vegetables well. My husband and I loved to order a large interesting assortment of appetizers/side dishes consisting of lots of veggies, some seafood and potatoes and rice all well but not necessarily strongly flavored and share. All things that could be easily, naturally gluten-free but I'm too afraid cross contamination and not up to asking all the questions about such a variety of dishes and ingredients. I feel pretty happy these days if I can get three very basic items that are safe and don't go out very often anymore. Foods from a variety of cultures would be nice too.

zkat Apprentice

My first suggestion is Move to TX :lol:

OK, now that that is out of the way.

1) I miss a variety of choices in resturants. It seems I am usually limited to just a couple of things everywhere I go.

2) Many of us have additional intolerances in addition to Gluten, so maybe list all ingredients. In my case it is soy and I get "soyed" way more often than I get gluttened.

3) You might also consider a Kosher menu. I know the resturant in Dallas that is 100% gluten free has a lot of Jewish customers because of dietary restrictions.

4) Have vegan options available too.

As you can see by the number of members on this forum, there is a market for this type of place. I might even come visit Michigen to eat there, but only during the summer-this southern girl does not handle the cold very well.

Juliebove Rising Star

A kosher menu might be tough to do if you are not kosher yourself. Meat and cheese can not be served together nor stored together. So that might make it tough for a pizza place.

Of course being honest with your customers is a must! We used to have a gluten free restaurant in this area that was not. The owner sold me a brownie for my daughter after hearing of her additional food allergies, assuring me it was safe for her to eat. Imagine my surprise when she got sick later that night.

On a subsequent visit, I found some brownies in their self serve freezer and they had a list of ingredients. They included eggs after the owner had assured me they were egg free.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Nantzie Collaborator

What a great thing for you guys to do. There's definitely a market for it, which will only get bigger in the next year or two.

First off, since your husband went to cooking school - Spelt, kamut, sprouted grains, wheat grass all have gluten. For some reason some cooking schools are still teaching to use spelt as an alternative to wheat, which doesn't make any sense because it actually has more gluten.

One of the things I would love to see is SAUCES. I use Bob's Red Mill Gluten-Free All-Purpose Flour to make all my sauces. It works and tastes just the same as regular flour. I make Bechamel and Mornay sauces like this quite a bit and the flavor doesn't suffer at all. One of the drawbacks to eating out gluten-free is that you end up with no sauces or gravies.

Homemade croutons are easy to make. You just make them out of gluten-free bread.

Desserts of course - Pies and cakes. For the kids you can also get gluten-free ice cream cones. Barkat makes them. I know there are a couple others but that's what I've got in my cabinet right now.

A kid's menu. With pizza you're halfway there, of course. Maybe a soft-serve ice cream bar, with all the different toppings to choose from? Or even regular ice cream, but they get a little divided tray with different toppings to choose from. Might be better that way for kids with other intolerances to keep things seperate. Maybe something other than pizza too like chicken nuggets, hot dogs or hamburgers for kids who don't like pizza (my son won't touch it).

Have a strict (firing offense) no-gluten allowed policy with all employees, washing hands thoroughly when they get there. It would be way too easy for someone to get sick because they came in with gluten on their hands, or brought a sandwich to work. (Remember Typhoid Mary?) If someone doesn't seem to take this VERY seriously or has an eye-rolling attitude about it, they shouldn't work for you.

Some gluten-free cocktails would be good.

I'd also like to see mainstream food trends show up in the menu. It would be nice to be able to try some of the things that regular restaurants do. Fondue is big right now, not sure if it will be in a couple years of course, but whatever is up and coming in mainstream restaurants.

Can't wait to hear how all of this progresses.

Nancy

wowzer Community Regular

I live in Sterling Heights MI. I wish you two luck on opening your restaurant. Wendy

debmidge Rising Star

For us we'd suggest that the selections be made in a fashion that it's easy to "hold" other accompanyments; for instance, customer may not want the Fish selection with the spicy gluten-free sauce as the customer cannot eat/tolerate spices and soy (like someone mentioned). Make the selections easy for the chef to make these adaptations.

Use gluten-free bread (of course) -

My husband misses having soup in restaurant - chicken rice/chicken noodle. So gluten-free soup sounds good to us.

Take out!

Will you do your own baking (breads, cakes, etc.)?

amybeth Enthusiast

Definitely offer take out and/or delivery.

Google: Jules Thin Crust - They are doing the same thing in PA right now.

I would recommend ALL gluten-free, which I think is what you're suggesting. Then there are no CC issues! You don't have to market it that way - it could just work out that way.

I miss appetizers. So many choices on most menus are off limits.

Good luck!

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,007
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    mlaabs
    Newest Member
    mlaabs
    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

    • Wheatwacked
      Welcome @JoJo0611. That is a valid question.  Unfortunately the short answer is slim to none.  Be proactive, when the diagnosis process is completed, start GFD.  Remember also that the western diet is deficient in many nutrients that governments require fortification.  Read the side of a breakfast cereal box. Anti-tTG antibodies has superseded older serological tests It has a strong sensitivity (99%) and specificity (>90%) for identifying celiac disease. A list of symptoms linked to Celiac is below.  No one seems to be tracking it, but I suspect that those with elevated ttg, but not diagnosed with Celiac Disease, are diagnosed with celiac disease many years later or just die, misdiagnosed.  Wheat has a very significant role in our economy and society.  And it is addictive.  Anti-tTG antibodies can be elevated without gluten intake in cases of other autoimmune diseases, certain infections, and inflammatory conditions like inflammatory bowel disease. Transient increases have been observed during infections such as Epstein-Barr virus.Some autoimmune disorders including hepatitis and biliary cirrhosis, gall bladder disease. Then, at 65 they are told you have Ciliac Disease. Milk protein has been connected to elevated levels.   Except for Ireland and New Zealand where almost all dairy cows are grass fed, commercial diaries feed cows TMR Total Mixed Rations which include hay, silage, grains and concentrate, protein supplements, vitamins and minerals, byproducts and feed additives. Up to 80% of their diet is food that cannot be eaten by humans. Byproducts of cotton seeds, citrus pulp, brewer’s grains (wheat and barley, rye, malt, candy waste, bakery waste. The wheat, barley and rye become molecules in the milk protein and can trigger tTg Iga in persons suseptible to Celiac. I can drink Grass fed milk, it tastes better, like the milk the milkman delivered in the 50's.  If I drink commercial or Organic milk at bedtime I wake with indigestion.    
    • captaincrab55
      Can you please share your research about MMA acrylic containing gluten?   I comin up blank about it containing gluten.  Thanks in Advance,  Tom
    • Aretaeus Cappadocia
      I strongly recommend 2 dedicated gluten free (gluten-free) restaurants in my area (East Bay of San Francisco Bay Area) (2025) -- Life is Sweet Bakery and Café in Danville. I've been a few times with friends and tried multiple entrees and salads. All very good and worth having again. I've also tried a number of their bakery goods. All extremely good (not just "good for gluten-free"). https://lifeissweetbakeryandcafe.com/ -- Kitara Kitchen in Albany (they have additional locations). I've been once and had the "Buritto Bowl". Six individual items plus a sauce. Outstanding. Not just "for gluten-free", but outstanding in its own right. Vibrant flavors, great textures. I can't wait to go back. https://www.kitava.com/location/kitava-albany/  
    • Martha Mitchell
      I'm 67 and have been celiac for 17yrs. I had cataract surgery and they put a gluten lens in my eye. Through a lot of research, I found out about MMA acrylic...it contains gluten. It took 6 months for me to find a DR that would remove it and replace it with a gluten-free lens . I have lost some vision in that eye because of it . I also go to a prosthodontist instead of a regular dentist because they are specialized. He has made me a night guard and a few retainers with no issues... where my regular dentist didn't care. I have really bad reactions to gluten and I'm extremely sensitive, even to CC. I have done so much research on gluten-free issues because of these Drs that just don't care. Gluten is in almost everything shampoo, lotion, food, spices, acrylic, medication even communion wafers! All of my Drs know and believe me I remind them often.... welcome to my world!
    • trents
      If this applies geographically, in the U.K., physicians will often declare a diagnosis of celiac disease based on the TTG-IGA antibody blood test alone if the score is 10x normal or greater, which your score is. There is very little chance the endoscopy/biopsy will contradict the antibody blood test. 
×
×
  • 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.