Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • 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 Celiac.com!
    eNewsletter
    Donate

My Elimination Diet


Swimmr

Recommended Posts

Swimmr Contributor

Ok I did some research today for elimination diets.

However I found contradictories from one site to the next.

Meats That Are Safe:

Lamb, halibut, orange roughy, tuna, snapper, wild salmon, crab, lobster, deer, duck, rabbit, goose, cornish game hens, clams, pheasant.

The contradiction is shellfish; crab, lobster, fish in general

Vegetables That Are Safe:

celery, okra, cucumbers, green peppers, yams, sweet potato, cabbage, squah, asparagus, cauliflower, artichokes, lettuce, carrots, brussel sprouts, spinach.

Contradictions: none found

Fruits That Are Safe:

peaches, pears, apples, raspberries, grapefruit, grapefruit juice (in small amounts), bananas, melons, grapes, kiwi

Contradictions: strawberries, apples, grapes and melon. Grapefruit and any citrus.

Condiments That Are Safe:

gelatin (?), flax seed oil, coconut, 100% carob powder, salt, sweeteners (stevia or honey or maple syrup), jellies (?), jams (?), extra virgin olive oil, grape seed oil, almond butter, sesame butter.

Nuts That Are Safe:

coconut, hazel nut, almonds and pecans BUT only unshelled natural unprocessed nuts.

Contradictions: All nuts. One website said NO nuts, while the other stated the above listed.

So I found extremely strict ones and then found some that included all of the above foods.

Obvious food to avoid:

vitamins aspirin beer coffee gum milk eggs beef chicken fish* pork wheat strawberries* fruit juice* nuts* cocolate corn tomatoes shellfish* oranges cola's white potato peas beans apples* any legumes

* is the contradictions...need some clarity please.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



  • Replies 75
  • Created
  • Last Reply
Wolicki Enthusiast

I haven't done the ED yet myself, but have considered it. My understanding is no nuts, dairy, wheat, corn, eggs, shellfish, nightshades (tomatoes, potatoes, peppers), soy, and other things that obviously give you issues. Hope that helps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
AliB Enthusiast

Why not just try the Specific Carb Diet? It's as good an elimination diet as any........

The point with an elimination diet is to remove the foods that are difficult to digest, so most will cut out virtually all grains, starches, sugar and dairy.

Alternatively, just try drinking more water..........give your body the water it needs to be able to digest the difficult foods (see some of my other posts for more info on that).

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor

The SFD doesn't give me any clarification at all. It says I can eat legumes...but flours made from legumes is in a list of items to avoid. Two other places I went to research elimination diets said NO legumes at all. That makes no sense to me.

I listed out what the contradictions were hoping maybe I could get an "ok" or a "no." I am still trying t learn all this stuff and I know most on here is too, but maybe one person has a firmer understanding than I do.

I want to do this right and if I keep finding conflicting material I'm just not gonna do it. I will be extremely angry if I go on this diet to find I'm either NOT eating something I should OR eating something I should NOT.

I know that avoiding dairy, soy, grains, etc is essential for this diet, but when I do the research, it doesn't match up from source to source.

I will start this later in the week when I have a firmer grasp on it. I really didn't think the information would be this wishy washy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor

Oh and I drink a qt almost every two hours...literally. Some days I might not get exactly that...but still, I KNOW I'm drinking plenty when I urinate so much people in my office ask why I have to go so much. On average every 1/2 hour or so. Then the occasions when I absolutely have to hold it...like driving time and running errands doesn't count.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor

Did more researching today, no clarity...I suppose I will have to buy a book for this...sheesh

Link to comment
Share on other sites
GFinDC Veteran

Hi Swimmr,

The idea of an elimination diet can be pretty simple really. You basically eliminate all foods and then add them back in one at a time. That's not real complicated eh? You would want to add basic foods to your diet, not processed foods with lots of ingredients. So say you start with bananas, rice and apples. If you can do these 3 foods for 3 days straight and have no problems, then you could add something new. Maybe add chicken next. And then 2 or 3 days later add something else, like sweet potatoes. Then add something else, like green beans. Then something else etc.. It doesn't take long before you have a long list of foods you are eating. The idea of waiting a couple days is it gives your body time to react to a new food. Some people have delayed reactions to things.

I agree with you there are more complicated elimination diet plans out there. But this is a simple one and works pretty darn well. You can start with any foods you want, just be sure they are foods you don't react to. Or at least foods that you don't think you react to. I have seen some plans where you start with 25 foods and alternate various foods in and out of that list. That seems too complex to me and has too many variables.

Here is a list of the top 8 allergens from Mayo Clinic.com. You would not want to start your diet with any of these 8 foods.

Open Original Shared Link

* Milk

* Eggs

* Peanuts

* Tree nuts (such as almonds, cashews, walnuts)

* Fish (such as bass, cod, flounder)

* Shellfish (such as crab, lobster, shrimp)

* Soy

* Wheat

Here is some info from Wiki on other allergies:

Open Original Shared Link

More rare food allergies

Likelihood of allergy can increase with exposure[citation needed]. For example, rice allergy is more common in East Asia where rice forms a large part of the diet.[13]

In Central Europe, celery allergy is more common. In Japan, allergy to buckwheat flour, used for Soba noodles, is more common.

Red meat allergy is extremely rare in the general population, but a geographic cluster of people allergic to red meat has been observed in Sydney, Australia.[14] There appears to be a possible association between localised reaction to tick bite and the development of red meat allergy.

Fruit allergies exist, such as to apples, pears, jackfruit, strawberries, etc.

Corn allergy may also be prevalent in many populations, although it may be difficult to recognize in areas such as the United States and Canada where corn derivatives are common in the food supply.[15]

Another thing you will see discussed is a rotation diet. Some people follow rotation diets where they don't eat the same thing 2 days running. The idea being that food intolerances can develop from constant exposure to a food. The too much of a good thing theory.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Swimmr Contributor
Hi Swimmr,

The idea of an elimination diet can be pretty simple really. You basically eliminate all foods and then add them back in one at a time. That's not real complicated eh? You would want to add basic foods to your diet, not processed foods with lots of ingredients. So say you start with bananas, rice and apples. If you can do these 3 foods for 3 days straight and have no problems, then you could add something new. Maybe add chicken next. And then 2 or 3 days later add something else, like sweet potatoes. Then add something else, like green beans. Then something else etc.. It doesn't take long before you have a long list of foods you are eating. The idea of waiting a couple days is it gives your body time to react to a new food. Some people have delayed reactions to things.

I agree with you there are more complicated elimination diet plans out there. But this is a simple one and works pretty darn well. You can start with any foods you want, just be sure they are foods you don't react to. Or at least foods that you don't think you react to. I have seen some plans where you start with 25 foods and alternate various foods in and out of that list. That seems too complex to me and has too many variables.

Here is a list of the top 8 allergens from Mayo Clinic.com. You would not want to start your diet with any of these 8 foods.

Open Original Shared Link

* Milk

* Eggs

* Peanuts

* Tree nuts (such as almonds, cashews, walnuts)

* Fish (such as bass, cod, flounder)

* Shellfish (such as crab, lobster, shrimp)

* Soy

* Wheat

Here is some info from Wiki on other allergies:

Open Original Shared Link

More rare food allergies

Likelihood of allergy can increase with exposure[citation needed]. For example, rice allergy is more common in East Asia where rice forms a large part of the diet.[13]

In Central Europe, celery allergy is more common. In Japan, allergy to buckwheat flour, used for Soba noodles, is more common.

Red meat allergy is extremely rare in the general population, but a geographic cluster of people allergic to red meat has been observed in Sydney, Australia.[14] There appears to be a possible association between localised reaction to tick bite and the development of red meat allergy.

Fruit allergies exist, such as to apples, pears, jackfruit, strawberries, etc.

Corn allergy may also be prevalent in many populations, although it may be difficult to recognize in areas such as the United States and Canada where corn derivatives are common in the food supply.[15]

Another thing you will see discussed is a rotation diet. Some people follow rotation diets where they don't eat the same thing 2 days running. The idea being that food intolerances can develop from constant exposure to a food. The too much of a good thing theory.

Thankyou. I know I seem like a broke record. I'm going to buy a book today. I didn't think I would have to, ya know?

So today I am trying to start it...

With my history in bodybuilding, my competition diets usually consisted of only chicken and broccoli, chicken and brown rice, or chicken and sweet potato. After my pm workout, but before 8pm I would have 6 oz of sirloin with green veggies. This diet plus the addition of exercise would literally melt the weight off. I would always have to incorporate protein shakes. Little did I know I was hurting myself with these. I would still lose weight, but would always feel so gross after gulping down the glutenous concoction. Now I understand why. Also I was allowed one cheat meal a month. That cheat meal would usually be a pancake with butter, syrup, and bacon. No wonder I'd be sick.

I'd experimented with other diets just two years ago while preparing for a show. The beginning of the diet had more variety, but basically had the same caloric count, same carb count and same protein count. There was salmon and cottage cheese and almonds...a bagel...and of course chicken.

I am going to use my knowledge from all that to help me with this. I will be prepared for the cravings and the withdrawals...thus able to control it better.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor

Day 1 (before I buy a book) :)

Since I know I don't have issues with almonds or walnuts, I bought some last night at my whole foods store.

I also bought Candida Freedom, Candida Digest, and Inulin which is a prebiotic.

I am taking my Cranberry, Vitamin D, my Multivitamin, Pre/Probiotic, and Inulin. This is a total of 6 pills and 1 tsp of the Inulin powder.

Breakfast: Banana with 1 serving of almonds...which is I believe around 15 to 20 almonds.

For Snacks I will eat either another banana or a really soft pear with the skin peeled off. I have nuts too.

Lunch: Last night I baked a chicken with squash, carrots, celery (cut small), mushrooms, and onion. There is two cloves of crushed garlic and some basil for taste. I covered it all in plain water. Baked for 1 hr 10 min.

Snack same as before

Dinner: Salmon fillet and a baked sweet potato with cinnamon. God I love my cinnamon and sugar and butter, but just cinnamon is fine I think.

Any criticism welcome.

Oh and I'm drinking ONLY half the amount of coffee I usually do. I can't just quit cold turkey. I am a graphic designer, I can't function with the severity of the withdrawal headaches. I find weaning myself off is MUCH more efficient. Granted I probably should have been doing this already so by today I wouldn't be drinking any. But...I procrastinated.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
GFinDC Veteran

Hi Swimmr,

It's good to get started eh? I tried a count of your items and it seems like you are at 20 or more foods, supplements, or drinks today. That's quite a few things in your diet to try and identify one item that is causing a problem. Your body only has one gut, so when you put that many items in it each day and then have a reaction, how could you pick out the one that caused it? Not really easy to do that.

If you are willing to start with 3 items only, then you can have a chance to get through the discovery phase quicker. You need to consider everything, and I mean everything as a potential problem. That includes any vitamins, supplements, drinks candy, medicines, veggies, nuts, meats etc that you are gobbling down. If it goes in your mouth it should be eliminated as a problem, before you assume it is safe for your body. I started with a bag of apples and salt. I did that for 2 days and then added rice. A couple days later I added chicken and black pepper. You just keep going like that adding things every day or 2 and note your body reactions. It is not hard to figure out really. If you have a food that you think is a problem you could hold off on adding that for while. When you add an item that makes you feel bad you put it on your list of things to avoid. That's really all there is to it. Easy-peasy!

If you are going to stop coffee as part of the elimination diet (which you should), I suggest you do that first and then start the elimination diet after you are used to being without the caffeine. Caffeine has a big effect on how your body functions and you don't want to confuse caffeine withdrawal symptoms with other reactions.

Even after you have a big list of foods that you eat, it is good to only had 1 new food at a time. Any more than that and you are back at the guessing games stage. But at least you would only have the list of new items you added that day to consider.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor

Well thankyou so much for your input.

I am almost 99% certain I am tolerant with the veggies I have in my chicken. I mean I suppose I should consider that I could be intolerant to celery or mushrooms. I didn't eat salmon tonight. I ate chicken and the mixed vegetables again.

I will cut it down though to just chicken and carrots then tomorrow through Sunday. I went the rest of today without any coffee. I am pretty sure I will be ok.

So that makes two chicken thighs, mixed veggies consisting of celery, mushroom, onion, carrot, and squash. Two bananas and a serving of almonds. That is it.

I have no stomach problems, no gas, no headaches so far.

As far as my medicines/vitamins...um...I have to have these. Doc said no missed days on my multi and vitamin D. Also the pre/probiotic and the enzyme that helps get rid of candida. I was told it's best to go ahead and start it so that when I start adding more foods I'll be able to digest it better if in fact I am not intolerant instead of being mislead into thinking I'm intolerant to something I'm not. Made sense to me.

Soooo tomorrow will be chicken and carrots and banana.

I can see this is going to be ALOT harder than I thought.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
gf-soph Apprentice

Hi

I don't want to make things harder than they already are for you, but I was recently on an elimination diet. It's a lot harsher than a lot of ones I have seen, but it has been designed and tested by the RPA (Royal Prince Alfred Hospital) here in Sydney over a number of years, and seems to be a widely accepted method here.

If you don't get clear answers from the diet you have started you could try this version, it's very hard to do but you will know you're not missing anything! They have a cookbook called 'friendly food' based on the diet, and was very useful. The website Open Original Shared Link is also helpful.

It looks particularly at 3 groups of chemicals - amines, salycates and glutamates, as well as removing many things depending on levels of symptoms - I ended up gluten free (was already), soy free, dairy free, legume free (for me as I had identified this earlier). No preservatives or additives allowed either. The only fruit they allowed was pears, and there was no onions and garlic involved. No herbs or spices. The only nuts allowed was 10 cashew a day. I don't have the rest of the details to hand as I switched to another diet after a while and there's a lot to remember.

I hope your diet gives you the answers you are looking for!

Sophie

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor

Thankyou Sophie! :)

I woke up extremely hungry this morning...

Might be a bit TMI, but every morning around 6am I have my bowel movement...not had it yet.

All in all I feel relatively alert this morning. That's a good sign.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
ksymonds84 Enthusiast
Thankyou Sophie! :)

I woke up extremely hungry this morning...

Might be a bit TMI, but every morning around 6am I have my bowel movement...not had it yet.

All in all I feel relatively alert this morning. That's a good sign.

glad you are feeling good so far this morning! One thing to keep in mind if you think maybe soy and symptoms pop up today or tomorrow, is to check your vitamins and supplements for soy. I had to get rid of almost all of mine because of soy. You will laugh but I take the the childrens gummy vites because they have no dairy, soy, gluten, eggs, peanuts, or artificial colors ect and they give me a full days supply of vitamin D. I chew 2 in the morning and sometimes take a third in the evening if I haven't ate as well as I should (I try to get most of my vitamins from food). There are grown up vitamins you can buy online free of soy but this I can get at grocery stores and a big supply at Sams. Hope it continues to go well for you today, keeping my fingers crossed that you figure it out, I know how much a pain in the butt it can be with not knowing what is upsetting you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor
glad you are feeling good so far this morning! One thing to keep in mind if you think maybe soy and symptoms pop up today or tomorrow, is to check your vitamins and supplements for soy. I had to get rid of almost all of mine because of soy. You will laugh but I take the the childrens gummy vites because they have no dairy, soy, gluten, eggs, peanuts, or artificial colors ect and they give me a full days supply of vitamin D. I chew 2 in the morning and sometimes take a third in the evening if I haven't ate as well as I should (I try to get most of my vitamins from food). There are grown up vitamins you can buy online free of soy but this I can get at grocery stores and a big supply at Sams. Hope it continues to go well for you today, keeping my fingers crossed that you figure it out, I know how much a pain in the butt it can be with not knowing what is upsetting you.

Yes thankyou :) Children's vitamins always taste yummy, MMmmm...making me hungry. Stupid coworkers all ordered chinese today.

Update!

I'm freakin HUNGRY. I ate two banana's already today...and at 10:30 had to eat half my lunch which is chicken and carrots. I don't know about later...all I have is pears. I am not supposed to add those yet.

Notes/Symptoms/Observations:

To let ya'll know, my bowel movement was so much more tolerable than usual. It was more solid AND it sank...kinda gross, I know, but I heard that when your poop floats and is foamy-ish, it's not a good sign. Mine hardly ever sinks and is always solid-ish/foamish.

Having mild caffeine withdrawal headache...but tolerable.

Last night I had some mild gas, but it wasn't painful and didn't smell at all, so that is good too.

I have some thoughts. Usually my diet doesn't consist of much out of the ordinary. My opinion is that the culprit is one of the following: Coffee Mate creamer (includes soy and casein), grits (corn), Extra Creamy Cool Whip in my coffee (includes cream and casein), rice, or my yogurt (which I know is ok). So since yesterday I've not had ANY of those things. My poop is different. One of those things is causing my problem.

My mother thinks it's the soy. I think it's either soy or casein.

Can someone explain to me how casein isn't considered dairy? It's a derivative of milk, but I don't understand how it can come from milk but be considered lactose free and dairy free (referring to coffee mate creamer).

Link to comment
Share on other sites
GFinDC Veteran

Hi Swimmr

I tried looking for a list of ingredients on the Coffeemate site but couldn't find it. They do say in the FAQ section that the sodum caseinate is highly processed so that it doesn't resemble a natural product anymore. Well, not exactly that, but they say it is refined to the point there is not anything like what comes from a cow in it. I am guessing you eliminated a whole gaggle of chemicals and junk from your body by removing that one item.

It sounds like you are on the right track on your diet. If you can keep going for another day and then start adding things slowly, slowly, you may be able to find your culprits.

Now, when you add things to your diet, they should be whole, single ingredients. Like add eggs. And next time add tomatoes. And next time add a potatoes. You wouldn't add something like Captain Billy's Big Box of Chemicals and Sugar and Preservatives cereal with 10 million unpronounceable ingredients. That kind of processed food could be added later on, after your are well along on understanding the whole foods that work for you. The problem with adding a processed food with multiple ingredients is simple, you don't know which one made you sick. I try to buy foods with short ingredient lists.

Drinking more water might help with hunger. But you don't need to skimp on your elimination diet. I went through a bag of apples in a few days. The idea is not to lose weight, but to detect problem foods / food intolerances I was real surprised to find carrots were a problem for me. Some people have problems with whole groups of foods, like nightshades. Others may have a reaction to just one of the foods in a group.

************************************************

Open Original Shared Link

As a courtesy, we place a "D" next to the kosher symbol (O.U.) to alert those who adhere to strict religious practices. COFFEE-MATE contains an ingredient called sodium caseinate, which is a milk derivative, though it

Link to comment
Share on other sites
ksymonds84 Enthusiast

I blamed Casein for over a year for my troubles and it ended up being soy intolerance (along with celiac) all along. I now enjoy hard cheeses, butter, and cream again with no problems. the coffee mates got me too with the soybean oil. Casein is a protein of milk along with whey. Non dairy food items do not contain the milk fat (lactose) so this is where the confusion begins. People who are only lactose intolerant can handle small amounts of hard cheese and butter because there is little lactose however more casein. The harder the cheese the larger amounts of casein. So if you are Casein intolerant then ALL dairy is a no go. Hope that helps some.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor
Hi Swimmr

I tried looking for a list of ingredients on the Coffeemate site but couldn't find it. They do say in the FAQ section that the sodum caseinate is highly processed so that it doesn't resemble a natural product anymore. Well, not exactly that, but they say it is refined to the point there is not anything like what comes from a cow in it. I am guessing you eliminated a whole gaggle of chemicals and junk from your body by removing that one item.

It sounds like you are on the right track on your diet. If you can keep going for another day and then start adding things slowly, slowly, you may be able to find your culprits.

Now, when you add things to your diet, they should be whole, single ingredients. Like add eggs. And next time add tomatoes. And next time add a potatoes. You wouldn't add something like Captain Billy's Big Box of Chemicals and Sugar and Preservatives cereal with 10 million unpronounceable ingredients. That kind of processed food could be added later on, after your are well along on understanding the whole foods that work for you. The problem with adding a processed food with multiple ingredients is simple, you don't know which one made you sick. I try to buy foods with short ingredient lists.

Drinking more water might help with hunger. But you don't need to skimp on your elimination diet. I went through a bag of apples in a few days. The idea is not to lose weight, but to detect problem foods / food intolerances I was real surprised to find carrots were a problem for me. Some people have problems with whole groups of foods, like nightshades. Others may have a reaction to just one of the foods in a group.

************************************************

Open Original Shared Link

As a courtesy, we place a "D" next to the kosher symbol (O.U.) to alert those who adhere to strict religious practices. COFFEE-MATE contains an ingredient called sodium caseinate, which is a milk derivative, though it

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor

Made by

Nestle USA, Inc.

Ingredients

Water, Sugar, Partially Hydrogenated Soybean and/or Cottonseed Oil, Sodium Caseinate (a Milk Derivative) Not a Source of Lactose)Dipotassium Phosphate, Sodium Stearoyl Lactylate, Polysorbate 60, Natural and Artificial Flavors Carrageenan, Beta-Carotene Color.

This is for the hazelnut coffeemate. I couldn't get ahold of the ingredients for the regular stuff. However there is a huge tub of it at work. The natural and artificial flavors is the difference, I think.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
GFinDC Veteran

Hi Swimmr,

The gas might just be from a change in your diet. We have bacteria colonies in our guts that consist of different kinds of bacteria. When you make a major diet change you are changing the goodies that your gut bacteria get to eat also. So the balance of which ones are thriving / growing can change. That could end up making some extra gas. Another thing is that your gut might start healing, which would change the landscape the little bacteria critters live on. Suddenly there's new villi apartment building sprouting with lots of folds and valleys. Lots more space for the critters to colonize and expand into. Urban sprawl? :)

I guess what I am trying to say is that some gasiness after going gluten free or any major diet change is not unusual, at least in my experience. It ought to settle down after you stabilize your diet for a while. Then again if you get major gasiness that could be an indicator of something your body doesn't like too. Lactose intolerance can cause major gasiness. Lactose is the sugar in milk, and casein is one of the proteins. The villi in your small intestine produce the lactase enzyme that digests the lactose sugar. When your villi aren't making the lactase enzyme due to damage, the lactose sugar gets eaten by the bacteria instead. They like sugar a lot (yum yum) and make a bunch of little burps and farts as they grow and multiply. Celiacs often have trouble with dairy. Not all do though. You might want to avoid late night snacks for a while. Could be easier to sleep that way. Cutting down on sugar would probably help also.

Tell mom she can make all the fish head soup she wants after she gets through the diet for a few weeks! Just as long as she has checked off all the ingredients by testing them one at a time, she should be ok!

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor
Hi Swimmr,

The gas might just be from a change in your diet. We have bacteria colonies in our guts that consist of different kinds of bacteria. When you make a major diet change you are changing the goodies that your gut bacteria get to eat also. So the balance of which ones are thriving / growing can change. That could end up making some extra gas. Another thing is that your gut might start healing, which would change the landscape the little bacteria critters live on. Suddenly there's new villi apartment building sprouting with lots of folds and valleys. Lots more space for the critters to colonize and expand into. Urban sprawl? :)

I guess what I am trying to say is that some gasiness after going gluten free or any major diet change is not unusual, at least in my experience. It ought to settle down after you stabilize your diet for a while. Then again if you get major gasiness that could be an indicator of something your body doesn't like too. Lactose intolerance can cause major gasiness. Lactose is the sugar in milk, and casein is one of the proteins. The villi in your small intestine produce the lactase enzyme that digests the lactose sugar. When your villi aren't making the lactase enzyme due to damage, the lactose sugar gets eaten by the bacteria instead. They like sugar a lot (yum yum) and make a bunch of little burps and farts as they grow and multiply. Celiacs often have trouble with dairy. Not all do though. You might want to avoid late night snacks for a while. Could be easier to sleep that way. Cutting down on sugar would probably help also.

Tell mom she can make all the fish head soup she wants after she gets through the diet for a few weeks! Just as long as she has checked off all the ingredients by testing them one at a time, she should be ok!

I've been gluten free for about two years...minus the accidentals and then the ones where I took "just a taste." How ever the "just a tastes" have been non-existent for over 5 months...completely strict within my means. Accidentals of course have happened.

I've never considered my sugar intake very high anyways...except with all the gluten free baked goods and the occasional Snickers. Late night snacks...no way jose...I cut that out a LONG time ago.

UPDATE TIME

I felt like I had "to go" last night before bed and couldn't. This morning right away had to and it kinda burned :o I was not happy about that. I don't feel emptied either.

Remember the almonds/pecans I had Wednesday? NO-GO! I think I finally digested them...I won't go into details, but I'm 99.9% sure it was the nuts.

No more nuts!

more later as the day progresses

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor

Around lunch time today I started getting very dizzy...kinda. Feels like I'm moving, but I'm not.

Went away...just came back about 15 minutes ago.

I've not has as much water as usual...but I have had 3 20 oz bottles of water.

DEFINITELY no more nuts for me for a while.

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor

Sorry this all boils down to bowel movements :huh: But what goes in directly affects what comes out...lol.

Had another one after work and STILL sure it's the almonds/pecans. I have gas too :(

Had baked chicken tonight and carrots simmered in the broth I made from the whole chicken the other night.

Adding eggs tomorrow!

Link to comment
Share on other sites
GFinDC Veteran

Hi Swimmr,

Are you sure one of the things you have been eating already is not a problem? You had about 20 things to start with right? I started with 2 things, apples and salt. Have you eliminated your vitamins and pills yet? Unless they are medically nessecary they should be eliminated also. And medicines should be researched to be sure they are gluten-free.

What do you think was making you dizzy? Do you think it was lack of food or a reaction to the diet? Or not enough water?

Link to comment
Share on other sites
Swimmr Contributor
Hi Swimmr,

Are you sure one of the things you have been eating already is not a problem? You had about 20 things to start with right? I started with 2 things, apples and salt. Have you eliminated your vitamins and pills yet? Unless they are medically nessecary they should be eliminated also. And medicines should be researched to be sure they are gluten-free.

What do you think was making you dizzy? Do you think it was lack of food or a reaction to the diet? Or not enough water?

DAY FOUR UPDATE

It was definitely the nuts that I ate on Wednesday that gave me gas and bad bowel movements. I know this because of clues that I won't discuss, ewwww. And it's been a long time since I've eating nuts of any kind...also I ate quite a few...borderline too many.

I think my dizziness was from just not drinking enough water yesterday.

My Pro/Prebiotic and the candida stuff came from my gluten free/whole foods store. It's certified allergen free. My multivitamin is certified allergen free and is a raw foods multi...nothing processed or man-made. My vitamin D is also allergen free.

The first day it wasn't 20 foods...

Chicken, carrots, celery, mushroom, onion...then bananas. But that was only for lunch. By dinner time I'd read what you wrote about it being too many and so I took out the celery, mushroom, and onion. I seasoned the chicken with some fresh herbs...basil, sage, and garlic...that counted too I guess. However I didn't season anything else since that meal at lunch except for salt and pepper.

This morning had a normal bowel movement again...unlike yesterday's. No gas at all today, no dizziness. I feel good.

Now for today...

Breakfast:

Three eggs and a banana

Snack:

Banana and some left over carrots.

Lunch:

Soup which consisted of the stock I made Tuesday night from a whole chicken, carrots, and pulled chicken.

Snack:

Chicken soup again (Campbell's ain't got NOTHING on this!)

then a banana

Dinner:

Chicken soup...again...with carrots. sorry ya'll but it's just SO good.

I went to walmart today to pick up some things and saw all the stuff I can't eat. This really sucks. But I know it's for a reason and I want to feel good all the time, not some of the time.

Thankyou SO much for the support!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

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



  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      121,034
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Toslebury
    Newest Member
    Toslebury
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.3k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):




  • Who's Online (See full list)

    • There are no registered users currently online

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Katiec123
      @RMJ it makes sense as it’s something I’ve experienced more than once. Currently 24 weeks and baby is doing well! Will be seeking more medical advice today 
    • Manaan2
      Thank you! This is great information and perfect timing because we have our first appointment for a second opinion tomorrow.  
    • trents
      Bright blood in the stool would indicate bleeding down at the lower end in the colorectal area as opposed to the small bowel below the stomach where celiac manifests damage to the villous lining. Are these blood stools persistent? It's not unusual for this to happen once in a while to most anyone when a small surface vessel breaks, kind of like a nose bleed. As Scott Adams said, you must continue to consume regular amounts of gluten if the specialist will be doing additional testing for celiac disease, which could include an endoscopy with biopsy of the small bowel lining.
    • Bev in Milw
      Checkouts gluten-free recipes at twww.redstaryeast.com We tried a bread machine years ago and weren’t happy with results. Bread machines have pre-set rise & bake times.  Unfortunately, the program doesn’t adjust to slight differences when measuring, relative humidity or temperature of ingredients & in kitchens.  Lots of efforts for ONE odd- sized loaf that hard to cut into useable slices.  College-aged son found best use for bread machine was as heavy duty mixer that ‘kept dust in the box.’  He would pre-measure ingredients for 2-3 loaves & use machine mix up individual batches.      Since gluten-free bread needs  to rise only once, each recipe of dough went into a loaf pan. Pans sat counter to rise—time dependent of temp in kitchen. Then, baked in oven until he, not machine, decided it was done.     Took ~10 min extra up front to measure & mix additions but adds nothing to rise & bake times.     Loaves are great for slicing (Slice extra before freezing!). One mess to clean up, saves time & energy since you need to bake  as is half as often (If  you plan to bake lots more than bread, opt for KitchenAid/ heavy duty mixer instead.  Cover with dish towel to capture dust!)     Personally, I’m sure I had as a kid since I’ve never been a fan  of bread. .  Have been wrapping corn tortillas around things for 40+ years.  Can still get a dozen 12-pks of tortillas for same or less than price as 1 load of gluten-free bread. PLUS. the tortillas have more nutrients!         
    • CelestialScribe
      Welcome to the forum. You are lucky because in Korean food, many classic meals such as bibimbap without sauce, barbecue meats and some kinds of soups generally do not have gluten. But it is a good idea to confirm with the restaurant workers for safety reasons. Regarding certain locations, I enjoy going to places such as Plant in Seoul and Sprout in Busan. Moreover, using applications like HappyCow or TripAdvisor can assist you to discover additional choices in the regions you plan to visit. One big tip: it is good to know some important Korean sentences, for example 'I cannot eat gluten' (geulluteuneul meogeul su eopseoyo)  or 'Does this have gluten?' (igeoe neun geulluteuni deureo innayo?) because they can be very helpful. If you are considering getting a local guide, I'd suggest this one https://gowithguide.com/korea They were very helpful when I needed to find places with gluten-free food options because they provide tours tailored to your preferences. Good luck with your travels! 🍻
×
×
  • Create New...