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

Advice On Speaking To A Nutritionist & Salad Bars


elonwy

Recommended Posts

elonwy Enthusiast

I work on a college campus, and sent the nutritionist for the food service an email explaining that I was newly diagnosed with celiac disease and could she tell me what on campus was gluten-free.

She sent me back an email that she was all eager to meet with me and could I give her resources so that she could best help me, as she's not that familiar with it.

I'm going to send her here, but wondered if there is anywhere else ( this is the only place I found people) or any specific literature I should recommend her to.

Also, I love salad bars, especially the one here on campus. There are croutons and crunchy chowmein noodles in bins in the salad bar. Am I safe?

I'm going on my first big gluten-free shopping trip tonight at Whole Foods. I have two books,printouts from this website, and a list a mile long ( I have to replace ALL my bathroom products).

I figure it'll take me at least two hours :). I really like the items you hate list, that is super-helpful. I've decided that this is a scavenger hunt, and every time I find something gluten-free I like I get to celebrate ( mostly consists of jumping up and down). It was way too depressing thinking about everything I couldn't eat.

I'm glad I found this place.

Elonwy


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



lbsteenwyk Explorer

Here are some resources your dietitian may find helpful.

Two articles in a recent issue of Gastroenterology that deal specifically with diet guidelines. The first is by Shelly Case, who is an RD well-versed in celiac disease; she has written a couple of books.

Open Original Shared Link

Open Original Shared Link

Other good/reputable resources include:

Open Original Shared Link

Open Original Shared Link

Open Original Shared Link

This site has an excellent slide show on Celiac Disease as well as a good beginners guide called The Gluten Free Diet Guide for Families.

There are other resources out there, but these should get her started. You may find them helpful as well.

Jnkmnky Collaborator

Keep in mind that WholeFoods is great, but pricey. I once stated here that if I had a limited budget, the only things I'd buy from the "specialty" shops would be Tinkyada Pasta and Kinnikinnick bread. All other products can be found gluten free in your local regular shopping store and they have coupons for those! It's great if you can go to town on the wholefoods experience. I just hear college and those days of poverty come rushing back to me! Did you say you have a safe and forbidden list? Take that with you! Also, Wholefood's staff is fabulous. You can ask for someone to escort you around the store and point out the gluten free products. Call ahead and make an appt if you think you should, or just show up and ask for someone to give you a gluten free tour. They are so helpful. WholeFoods actually holds Gluten Free faires every year. So they really know what's what.

elonwy Enthusiast

I talked to the nutritionist, and she was very helpful. She had a list all ready for me with the different places on campus and what everything has in it. She also told me that all the workers are aware of this, because a bunch of students have it and that they are always open to requests to clean the grill and stuff like that. It was very heartening. I also sent her all those links, which hopefully will help her. She did mention sprouted wheat bread, to which I replied that I was pretty positive that isn't ok on a gluten-free diet. She did give me the ingredient lists to everything, not just what they had on thier approved lists, so in case there is any misinformation I can make my own decisions. Sofar everyone has been really helpful, which is very heartening.

Thanks for all the help.

Elonwy

terri Contributor

As to your question about the safety of salad bars, as you pointed out they have bins of croutons and chow mein noodles. Some people will use the scoop for croutons and then grab something else and it gets crumbs in it as well. Also, when the servers prepared the salad bar, did they pick up the croutons and then pick up some lettuce, or zucchini with the same gloves, thereby getting crumbs on them as well? I know it may sound picky, but all it takes is a crumb for your gut to be in trouble. So, sorry, but I would strongly advise against the salad bar. I also speak from experience. Just after I was diagnosed, I thought "well, thank goodness I can still have a salad bar" and did and got quite glutened from it.. :(

elonwy Enthusiast

Yeah, I went over to the salad bar about an hour ago. They also have a Wok Crazy ( fill your bowl then they wok it for you). There were crumbs and noodles and what-have-you everywhere! Just looking at all the mixed up food made me kind of queasy, so I bought some Edamame ( soybeans, salt) and some kettle chips ( potatoes, olive oil, sea salt) and gave up. The shared food thing just isn't going to work. Time to bring in lunches!

Its really funny, I never even noticed it before.

Elonwy

terri Contributor

You'll get used to it in time. I went down to the cafeteria yesterday and stood in line to get a bottle of tea and all around me were baked goods and sandwiches being made, and steak and cheeses being grilled, lasagna being dished out and I wasn't even fazed. Instead, I was scoping out the bananas and apples! That's what happens after a year in this lifestyle, your body doesn't even want the gluten filled stuff anymore. You'll find this is a far healthier diet and much better for your body. :D So, hang in there and don't despair.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



jams Explorer
I talked to the nutritionist, and she was very helpful. She had a list all ready for me with the different places on campus and what everything has in it. She also told me that all the workers are aware of this, because a bunch of students have it and that they are always open to requests to clean the grill and stuff like that. It was very heartening. I also sent her all those links, which hopefully will help her. She did mention sprouted wheat bread, to which I replied that I was pretty positive that isn't ok on a gluten-free diet. She did give me the ingredient lists to everything, not just what they had on thier approved lists, so in case there is any misinformation I can make my own decisions. Sofar everyone has been really helpful, which is very heartening.

Thanks for all the help.

Elonwy

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>

Has anyone else been told that sprouted wheat should be okay? I was just talking with a co-worker yesterday and she told me there is no protien in the sprouts. I know nothing about this. I didn't even know that wheat grew sprouts. I thought only beans and rotten potatoes did! :o I am not a very good chef! LOL. Any thoughts or experiences?

elonwy Enthusiast

Many plants sprout from seeds. Actually anything that grows from a seed can be sprouted. When something has been "sprouted" its usaully grown on a gel or spoungelike substance instead of dirt to make it clean. The problem I see with Sprouted wheat is, its basically immature wheat plants. For people that don't have gluten problems, its healthier because it has all those baby nutrients. For people that have gluten problems, a wheat plant is a wheat plant, whether adult or infant. I wouldn't mess with it.

Elonwy

ianm Apprentice

I can't say I've ever had a problem with a salad bar. I eat at them quite frequently because I have to travel for work. I may have been glutened a time or two at one but I can't say for sure.

uclangel422 Apprentice

I agree, i eat at salad bars a lot without any problems. I am selective about my salad bar though. I steer clear from small salad bars and the ones in the markets because there is nobody really in charge of them. I eat at Souplantation a lot and they usually have 2-3 people behind the salad bar who is watching people and making sure they do not mix up spoons. I even saw them remove a whole thing of cheese because someone had tried to mix them up, i felt a lot better after that.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,397
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Megannnnn
    Newest Member
    Megannnnn
    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

    • Scott Adams
    • Scott Adams
      I had the same thing happen to me at around your age, and to this day it's the most painful experience I've ever had. For me it was the right side of my head, above my ear, running from my nerves in my neck. For years before my outbreak I felt a tingling sensation shooting along the exact nerves that ended up exactly where the shingles blisters appeared. I highly recommend the two shot shingles vaccine as soon as your turn 50--I did this because I started to get the same tingling sensations in the same area, and after the vaccines I've never felt that again.  As you likely know, shingles is caused by chicken pox, which was once though of as one of those harmless childhood viruses that everyone should catch in the wild--little did they know that it can stay in your nervous system for your entire life, and cause major issues as you age.
    • trents
    • Clear2me
      Thanks for the info. I recently moved to CA from Wyoming and in that western region the Costco and Sam's /Walmart Brands have many nuts and more products that are labeled gluten free. I was told it's because those products are packaged and processed  in different  plants. Some plants can be labeled  gluten free because the plant does not also package gluten products and they know that for example the trucks, containers equipment are not used to handle wheat, barely or Rye. The Walmart butter in the western region says gluten free but not here. Most of The Kirkland and Members Mark brands in CA say they are from Vietnam. That's not the case in Wyoming and Colorado. I've spoken to customer service at the stores here in California. They were not helpful. I check labels every time I go to the store. The stores where I am are a Sh*tshow. The Magalopoly grocery chain Vons/Safeway/Albertsons, etc. are the same. Fishers and Planters brands no longer say gluten free. It could be regional. There are nuts with sugar coatings and fruit and nut mixes at the big chains that are labeled gluten free but I don't want the fruit or sugar.  It's so difficult I am considering moving again. I thought it would be easier to find safe food in a more populated area. It's actually worse.  I was undiagnosed for most of my life but not because I didn't try to figure it out. So I have had all the complications possible. I don't have any spare organs left.  No a little gluten will hurt you. The autoimmune process continues to destroy your organs though you may not feel it. If you are getting a little all the time and as much as we try we probably all are and so the damage is happening. Now the FDA has pretty much abandoned celiacs. There are no requirements for labeling for common allergens on medications. All the generic drugs made outside the US are not regulated for common allergens and the FDA is taking the last gluten free porcine Thyroid med, NP Thyroid, off the market in 2026. I was being glutened by a generic levothyroxin. The insurance wouldn't pay for the gluten free brand any longer because the FDA took them all off their approved formulary. So now I am paying $147 out of pocket for NP Thyroid but shortly I will have no safe choice. Other people with allergies should be aware that these foreign generic pharmaceutical producers are using ground shellfish shell as pill coatings and anti-desicants. The FDA knows this but  now just waits for consumers to complain or die. The take over of Wholefoods by Amazon destroyed a very reliable source of good high quality food for people with allergies and for people who wanted good reliably organic food. Bezos thought  he could make a fortune off people who were paying alot for organic and allergen free food by substituting cheap brands from Thailand. He didn't understand who the customers were who were willing to pay more for that food and why. I went from spending hundreds to nothing because Bezo removed every single trusted brand that I was buying. Now they are closing Whole foods stores across the country. In CA, Mill Valley store (closed July 2025) and the National Blvd. store in West Los Angeles (closed October 2025). The Cupertino store will close.  In recent years I have learned to be careful and trust no one. I have been deleberately glutened in a restaurant that was my favorite (a new employee). The Chef owner was not in the kitchen that night. I've had  a metal scouring pad cut up over my food.The chain offered gluten free dishes but it only takes one crazy who thinks you're a problem as a food fadist. Good thing I always look. Good thing they didn't do that to food going to a child with a busy mom.  I give big tips and apologize for having to ask in restaurants but mental illness seem to be rampant. I've learn the hard way.          I don't buy any processed food that doesn't say gluten free.  I am a life long Catholic. I worked for the Church while at college. I don't go to Church anymore because the men at the top decided Jesus is gluten. The special hosts are gluten less not gluten free. No I can't drink wine after people with gluten in their mouth and a variety of deadly germs. I have been abandoned and excluded by my Church/Family.  Having nearly died several times, safe food is paramount. If your immune system collapses as mine did, you get sepsis. It can kill you very quickly. I spent 5 days unconscious and had to have my appendix and gall bladder removed because they were necrotic. I was 25. They didn't figure out I had celiac till I was 53. No one will take the time to tell you what can happen when your immune system gets overwhelmed from its constant fighting the gluten and just stops. It is miserable that our food is processed so carelessly. Our food in many aspects is not safe. And the merging of all the grocery chains has made it far worse. Its a disaster. Krogers also recently purchased Vitacost where I was getting the products I could no longer get at Whole Foods. Kroger is eliminating those products from Vitacost just a Bezos did from WF. I am looking for reliable and certified sources for nuts. I have lived the worst consequences of the disease and being exposed unknowingly and maliciously. Once I was diagnosed I learned way more than anyone should have to about the food industry.  I don't do gray areas. And now I dont eat out except very rarely.  I have not eaten fast food for 30 years before the celiac diagnosis. Gluten aside..... It's not food and it's not safe.  No one has got our backs. Sharing safe food sources is one thing we can do to try to be safe.        
    • Mmoc
      Thank you kindly for your response. I have since gotten the other type of bloods done and am awaiting results. 
×
×
  • 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.