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

Confused By Potato


GottaSki

Recommended Posts

GottaSki Mentor

Last August I removed every possible food intolerance and then trialed each food separately over the past 6 months.

All of my reactions were very clear with the exception of potato. I should add that all other nightshades had very bad reactions. When I initially trialed potato I had no reaction. They remained out of my diet while I trialed other foods, but when I stopped trialing and added those few items I hadn't lost back into my diet - potatoes bothered me sometimes. It seemed to start with some mashed potatoes that were made with yukon golds - roasted baby reds, no reaction. Then I was searching for a salty snack -- potato chips are the chink in my armor...so I've been trying to find one that isn't made with sunflower oil - as this would cause anaphylaxis. Finally found chips made with olive oil - ordered them from Amazon and had one evening of crunch for the first time in over six months. I didn't have a bad reaction that first night, but as potatoes seemed to be bothering me I removed them all again including the chips. On Friday night I was having a severe crunch attack...while my men were crunching very loudly (in all honestly they were just eating tortilla chips as normal -- but like in a slow motion movie -- it was extremely loud to me) anyhoo I broke down and ate 1/2 a bag of my olive oil chips (bag is 5 oz). I became extremely tired within a couple hours and yesterday I was a wreck - horrible achy, weak, numb fingers, joints, EXTREMELY angry for no reason, etc. Was completely locked up by evening and this morning woke up sore but better -- the only food it could be was those damned chips.

Does anyone else react hap-hazardly to potato? Some type of potato more than others (not counting sweet potato -- I know those are different family)?

I'm removing potato until I start to re-trial my intolerances in August, but am very curious about the mixed reactions I get to potato!!! Oh - might mention that I have had In&Out French Fries 3 times with no reaction -- makes it hard to avoid them but will for now.

Thanks everyone!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Skylark Collaborator

Yes, yes, yes. I can't do tomato or very much pepper but my reactions to potato are haphazard. I am wondering if it has to do with how much solanine is in the individual potato. There is apparently quite a bit of variation depending on the strain of potato, the age, how they were stored, and how carefully the potatoes were peeled and the eyes removed. You may have gotten a low dose eating a few, and a dose over your personal tolerance eating half the bag.

Adding to my confusion, I've learned that most processed potato products contain undeclared sulfites. Open Original Shared Link explains it pretty well. :rolleyes: It's mentioned in Sue Dengate's book too. (I'm trying to figure out why gluten-free breads trigger my asthma while the whole versions of foods like potato, rice, and corn don't and suspecting undeclared sulfites.) And then there is the natural MSG that forms in potato chips...

Your joint pain reaction sounds like solanine, thought the anger could be a reaction to the natural MSG.

GottaSki Mentor

undeclared sulfites would do it in me -- I can't eat anything that ends in -ite! I'll read up on that one for sure!

Thanks Skylark!

Skylark Collaborator

Yeah, I'm getting really suspicious of them for my mild asthma. Here is Sue Dengate's fact sheet on sulfites.

Open Original Shared Link

MOST potato chips are supposedly OK and added sulfite is supposed to be declared, but when I Google search, potato chips keep showing up on the "avoid" lists for sulfite sensitivity. Seems like I see a lot of recalls for undeclared sulfites on potato chips. Also if the chip manufacturer bought whole, peeled potatoes from a processor they may have been dipped in undeclared sulfite.

I'm pretty sure all In-N-Out does is peel their potatoes and toss them into the fryer.

GottaSki Mentor

"I'm pretty sure all In-N-Out does is peel their potatoes and toss them into the fryer."

Yep...you can watch them create the fries in the kitchen while sitting in the drive thru -- haven't seen the peeling, but have seen the huge bag of potatoes in the back of the restaurant and the press machine that cuts the potatoes into fries.

I've read a few net articles since you pointed out the the potato article this morning. Makes sense to me...maybe I can have an occasional In&Out or homemade french fry! Think I'll toss some really thin slices of sweet potato/olive oil in the oven first -- don't want to touch a potato with a ten foot poll this week :)

BarryC Collaborator

Even one small baked potato bloats me up a whole belt notch. Anything with potato-especially chips. I wonder what the gluten connection is? My carbs now consist only of Glutino bread and rice.

GottaSki Mentor

Even one small baked potato bloats me up a whole belt notch. Anything with potato-especially chips. I wonder what the gluten connection is? My carbs now consist only of Glutino bread and rice.

Try sweet potatoes, not yams - - they are not in the same family as russets, red and gold potatoes.

We bake, mash, boil and roast them - great substitute!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



psawyer Proficient

There is plenty of chance to be confused about common terms for different plants.

Potatoes are in the nightshade family, Solanaceae.

Sweet potatoes are in the family Convolvulaceae. They are not related to potatoes, except in the name.

Yams are not the same as sweet potatoes, and are several species in the family Dioscoreaceae.

While often confused, these are very different plants.

mushroom Proficient

Just to make things even more confusing, you can't buy a yam in New Zealand. Everything remotely looking like a yam or a sweet potato is called a kumara - whether yellow, white, orange or purple, (otherwise known as the Maori potato :P ) No rutabagas either (swedes), no zucchini (courgettes), no eggplant (aubergines), ask for an artichoke and you get a Jerusalem artichoke (which is a tuber), no Romaine lettuce (cos), no arugula (rocket), I swear to God, when I first got back here I used to point - "I will have a couple of those!!. Witloof, anyone??? :lol:

GottaSki Mentor

Even here in California -- I'm in san diego (sothern cali) plenty of plain (white/yellow flesh) sweet potatoes -- my daughter lives just north of the bay area - loads of sweet potato in a rainbow of colors - love the purple ones called "japanese sweet potato" where I purchased them.

RiceGuy Collaborator

I have also noticed that different levels of processing and cooking of potato can influence how much they effect me, but dosage, and multiple doses over time will still get me.

I have tried frying sweet potato like French fries and chips, and though this does work, the texture is different. If you want a really good crunchy potato-like chip, try making them from taro root (the white variety). I like the flavor even better than potato, and yes, taro can also be boiled, mashed, baked and so forth! It is white inside like a potato, slightly sweeter, and some say there's a hint of water chestnut-like flavor. The chips turned out with and unbeatable crunch!

Incidentally, I hope you're not cooking with virgin olive oil, but even the light olive oil cannot take the heat like other oils more suited for cooking. So there's going to be a higher level of free radical formation as the oil breaks down more. This occurs even if the oil is not heated to the smoke-point. Aside from sunflower oil, some good oils for cooking include high-oleic safflower oil, macadamia nut oil, expeller-pressed rice bran oil, grapeseed oil, and for some application you can also use coconut oil. I recall that avocado oil also has a high heat tolerance.

GottaSki Mentor

I have also noticed that different levels of processing and cooking of potato can influence how much they effect me, but dosage, and multiple doses over time will still get me.

I have tried frying sweet potato like French fries and chips, and though this does work, the texture is different. If you want a really good crunchy potato-like chip, try making them from taro root (the white variety). I like the flavor even better than potato, and yes, taro can also be boiled, mashed, baked and so forth! It is white inside like a potato, slightly sweeter, and some say there's a hint of water chestnut-like flavor. The chips turned out with and unbeatable crunch!

Incidentally, I hope you're not cooking with virgin olive oil, but even the light olive oil cannot take the heat like other oils more suited for cooking. So there's going to be a higher level of free radical formation as the oil breaks down more. This occurs even if the oil is not heated to the smoke-point. Aside from sunflower oil, some good oils for cooking include high-oleic safflower oil, macadamia nut oil, expeller-pressed rice bran oil, grapeseed oil, and for some application you can also use coconut oil. I recall that avocado oil also has a high heat tolerance.

Thanks!

Already learned my something new for the day - well two things.

Taro root on the shopping list :)

Knew I shouldn't fry in olive oil -- but had no idea that we shouldn't cook with it at all -- seem to remember some rule about not taking it up too high in temperature, but guess I never checked actually what temperature that meant. I react to all liquid oils with the exception of olive oil -- did make some candy with coconut oil -- I'll break it out to use in other functions today.

Thanks again - have a great week.

Skylark Collaborator

In truth, it's not good to heat any unsaturated oil. The "healthiness" of cooking with vegetable oils is food industry propaganda and partly responsible for American diet-related health problems. They all produce free radicals and trans-fats when you heat them, especially in a frying pan. I don't know whether baking is as bad. Stuff I've read says nut oils are even more fragile than olive. Cook with ghee, coconut oil, or animal fat and save your nut and olive oils for salad. :)

T.H. Community Regular

undeclared sulfites would do it in me -- I can't eat anything that ends in -ite!

I wonder if some of the severity of the reaction might be due to other foods you consumed during the day that added to your sulfite load?

You might already be very aware of these, but just in case it's new info, foods from the Brassica family (cabbage, mustard greens, radishes, etc...), and the allium family (onions, garlic, leeks, and so on) are only a problem for folks on the more sensitive side of sulfite sensitivity, but they might have added to your sulfite load, as it were. Some other potential problem foods would be peanuts, maple syrup, eggs, grapes, vinegars, gelatin, and chocolate.

And sulfite dioxide in the exhaust from cars will also add to your sulfite load, so if you had the potatoes on a day when you were in traffic for much longer, or after a long day of driving on a freeway or standing near a busy street for a long stretch of time, that could affect things too, you know?

...as I recently found out after being around traffic all day, and then eating a dish that I had been perfectly fine with the day before. <_<

Aly1 Contributor

Hmmm, I am curious about this sulfite load concept as I recently discovered problems with onions, garlic and now potatoes; we had a roast with potatoes and my stomach bloated out right away. Didn't get the connection but the next day I had the left over roast potatoes and within a half hour my ears were ringing so loudly. This ear ringing thing has been coming and going for the past two months (it's really loud!) but I hadn't been able to associate it with anything I was eating until now. I have issues with corn so I thought that maybe it had to due with the way potatoes are treated with a corn-based spray to stop sprouting...but maybe its sulfites (?).

GottaSki Mentor

I wonder if some of the severity of the reaction might be due to other foods you consumed during the day that added to your sulfite load?

You might already be very aware of these, but just in case it's new info, foods from the Brassica family (cabbage, mustard greens, radishes, etc...), and the allium family (onions, garlic, leeks, and so on) are only a problem for folks on the more sensitive side of sulfite sensitivity, but they might have added to your sulfite load, as it were. Some other potential problem foods would be peanuts, maple syrup, eggs, grapes, vinegars, gelatin, and chocolate.

And sulfite dioxide in the exhaust from cars will also add to your sulfite load, so if you had the potatoes on a day when you were in traffic for much longer, or after a long day of driving on a freeway or standing near a busy street for a long stretch of time, that could affect things too, you know?

...as I recently found out after being around traffic all day, and then eating a dish that I had been perfectly fine with the day before. <_<

Thanks! This is very interesting - I just found out I that I can't eat radish - did not know they were high in sulphites and have had minor ptoblem with some greens I've tried. I do eat the vegies you listed as well as eggs and occasionally grapes.

The traffic comment makes some sense as well - when I ride my bike I try to avoid heavy traffic as it adds to my breathing problems - have to wear a bandana on my face when I have to take a busy road.

I will look into this some more - thanks!

GottaSki Mentor

Hmmm, I am curious about this sulfite load concept as I recently discovered problems with onions, garlic and now potatoes; we had a roast with potatoes and my stomach bloated out right away. Didn't get the connection but the next day I had the left over roast potatoes and within a half hour my ears were ringing so loudly. This ear ringing thing has been coming and going for the past two months (it's really loud!) but I hadn't been able to associate it with anything I was eating until now. I have issues with corn so I thought that maybe it had to due with the way potatoes are treated with a corn-based spray to stop sprouting...but maybe its sulfites (?).

I completely understand your confusion. I have had no reaction to potato and had severe bloat - going to study everyones suggestions before I try them again.

Good luck on solving all these crazy puzzles ;)

  • 2 weeks later...
Sparky10 Newbie

I have also noticed that different levels of processing and cooking of potato can influence how much they effect me, but dosage, and multiple doses over time will still get me.

I have tried frying sweet potato like French fries and chips, and though this does work, the texture is different. If you want a really good crunchy potato-like chip, try making them from taro root (the white variety). I like the flavor even better than potato, and yes, taro can also be boiled, mashed, baked and so forth! It is white inside like a potato, slightly sweeter, and some say there's a hint of water chestnut-like flavor. The chips turned out with and unbeatable crunch!

Incidentally, I hope you're not cooking with virgin olive oil, but even the light olive oil cannot take the heat like other oils more suited for cooking. So there's going to be a higher level of free radical formation as the oil breaks down more. This occurs even if the oil is not heated to the smoke-point. Aside from sunflower oil, some good oils for cooking include high-oleic safflower oil, macadamia nut oil, expeller-pressed rice bran oil, grapeseed oil, and for some application you can also use coconut oil. I recall that avocado oil also has a high heat tolerance.

Totally incorrect ! Read the book 'deep nutrition' by dr cate shanahan and learn about all vegetable oils except olive oil will cause free radicals! That's the problem with forums, lay people giving advice...can be very confusing!

mushroom Proficient

There seem to be as many different opinions about coooking oils as there are articles, books and studies done on them. Here is one article that purports to give the smoke point of all the various cooking oils and makes recommendations:

Open Original Shared Link

Skylark Collaborator

Totally incorrect ! Read the book 'deep nutrition' by dr cate shanahan and learn about all vegetable oils except olive oil will cause free radicals! That's the problem with forums, lay people giving advice...can be very confusing!

Olive oil forms free radicals like any other unsaturated vegetable oil when it's heated. Cold-pressed virgin olive oil has some natural antioxidants that keep it from forming free radicals as long as it's not heated.

Kjas Newbie

The only oils I know that are safe to heat are macadamia oil and coconut oil.

All the others, when heated past a certain point have the effect already stated. Macadamia oil can be heated to a medium - high heat without negative effects and I usually l use it in cooking, stir frying, etc since it has a nice, light and very yummy taste. Coconut oil can be heated to a very high heat without damage but I mainly use it in baked products due to the taste factor.

As far as potatoes - they are my personal arch nemesis. I don't react to any other nightshade except potato. It's to the point where I end up with a stomach ache (if it stays down) as bad or worse then the gluten stomach aches used to be. It can also affect me up to 3 days later, so personally it's not worth it. My cousin has the same problem.

  • 2 weeks later...
Nadia2009 Enthusiast

Too bad I am reading this now that I switched to olive oil. I always thought olive oil wasn't good for frying and I knew that for years but have recently changed my mind because of the negative info on canola.

The only thing I fry are white potatoes and plantains and I try to keep the heat down. Would this still create free radicals?

Skylark Collaborator

I fry with saturated fats, not oils. Ghee, coconut oil, lard, or tallow all hold up well when heated. Any unsaturated oil (i.e. ALL liquid vegetable oils) will create free radicals and trans-fats to some degree when heated.

T.H. Community Regular

Hmmm, I am curious about this sulfite load concept as I recently discovered problems with onions, garlic and now potatoes; we had a roast with potatoes and my stomach bloated out right away. Didn't get the connection but the next day I had the left over roast potatoes and within a half hour my ears were ringing so loudly. This ear ringing thing has been coming and going for the past two months (it's really loud!) but I hadn't been able to associate it with anything I was eating until now. I have issues with corn so I thought that maybe it had to due with the way potatoes are treated with a corn-based spray to stop sprouting...but maybe its sulfites (?).

Were these potatoes that you roasted yourself? If they are regular potatoes that you roasted, it may not be sulfur/sulfites. The sulfite issue with potatoes is typically what is added to most processed potatoes foods (it keeps them from browning) so frozen potato products, potato chips, that sort of thing. But it's not usually added to plain potatoes.

Canola oil seems to be a problem for sulfite folks, though, so if you used that particular oil on the potatoes that could be an ieeu. Also, the vast-majority of processed corn 'stuff,' like corn starch, citric acid, xanthan gum, etc... is sulfited to a certain extent. As I understand it, the corn is soaked in a solution that contains sulfites, before processing, and this has been enough to make a lot of sulfite folks have issues with processed corn or substances that come into contact with corn during the processing in some way.

I would not necessarily ever recommend this to anyone, but the way I ended up checking if I reacted to sulfites was to go to a brewery/wine making store. They sell sulfite powder (sodium sulfite or potassium sulfite, I think it usually is) there for brewers to add to their wines - it was less than $5 for a tiny bottle of the stuff, and you use very little of it. They tell how much of the powder to add to make it Xppm.

I checked online(about.com on sulfite allergies) and found out that around 50 ppm is considered a moderate amount of sulfite, and between 10-50 ppm is considered a low amount of sulfite, but a sensitive person can still react to that much. I made a 25 ppm solution of the stuff in water, did a blind taste test between that and plain water, and holy COW did it give me SUCH a massive headache.

However, I was suspecting that was my reaction, so it's not life threatening, you know?

So...easy way to test, if highly unpleasant. People with a severe reaction go to an allergist to get it tested, but might be able to do it this way at an allergist's, as well.

Skylark Collaborator

OK this is crazy. I think I might be reacting to potato SKIN. Tater tots didn't bother me but a whole baked potato has gotten me twice. How weird is that?

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. - cristiana replied to Colleen H's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      16

      Ibuprofen

    2. - Mari replied to KathyR37's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      5

      New here

    3. - Colleen H replied to Colleen H's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      16

      Ibuprofen

    4. - Colleen H posted a topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      0

      Methylprednisone treatment for inflammation?

    5. - cristiana replied to Colleen H's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      16

      Ibuprofen


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,878
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Peta Dunn
    Newest Member
    Peta Dunn
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • cristiana
      Ferritin levels.  And see what your hemoglobin looks like too, that will tell you if you are anemic?  You can have 'low normal' levels that will not be flagged by blood tests.  I had 'low normal' levels, my lab reading was. c12, just over what was considered normal, but I had small benign lesion on my tongue, and sometimes a sore mouth, and a consultant maxillofacial ordered an iron infusion for me as he felt my levels were too low and if he  raised them to 40, it would help.   Because you are not feeling 100% it might be worth looking at your levels, then discussing with your doctor if they are low normal.  But I stress, don't supplement iron without your levels being monitored, too much is dangerous.
    • Mari
      Hi Katht -  I sympathize with your struggles in following a gluten-free diet and lifestyle. I found out that I had Celiac Disease a few months before I turned 70. I just turned 89 and it has taken me almost 20 years to attain a fairly normal intestinal  function. I also lost a lot of weight, down to 100 lb. down from about 140 lb. What Trents wrote you was very true for me. I am still elimination foods from my diet. One person suggested you keep a food diary and that is a good idea but it is probably best just to do an elimination diet. There are several ne and maybe one for celiacs. I used one for a while and started with plain rice and zucchini and then added back other foods to see if I reacted or not. That helped a great deal but what I did not realise that it would only very small amounts of some foods to cause inflammation in my intestine. Within the last few years I have stopped eating any trace amounts of hot peppers, corn and soy(mostly in supplements) and nuts, (the corn in Tylenol was giving me stomach aches and the nuts were causing foot pains). Starting an elimination diet with white rice is better than brown rice that has some natural toxins. In addition it is very important to drink sufficient plain water. You can find out how much to drink for your height and weight online. I do have difficulty drinking 48 ounces of water but just recently have found an electrolyte supplement that helps me stay well hydrated, Adding the water and electrolytes may reduce muscle cramps and gag spams you wrote about. . Also buy some anti-gluten enzyme capsules to take with meals. I use GliadinX advertised here. These are a lot of things to do at one time as they reflect my 20 years of experience. I hope you do what you can manage to do over time. Good luck and take care.
    • Colleen H
      Yes thyroid was tested.. negative  Iron ...I'm. Not sure ... Would that fall under red blood count?  If so I was ok  Thank you for the detailed response..☺️
    • Colleen H
      Hi all !! Did anyone ever get prescribed methylprednisone steroids for inflammation of stomach and intestines?  Did it work ??  Thank you !! 
    • cristiana
      Hi Colleen Are you supplementing B12/having injections? I have learned recently that sometimes when you start addressing a B12 deficiency, it can temporarily make your symptoms worse.  But it is important not to stop the treatment.  Regarding your problems with anxiety, again that is another symptom of a B12 deficiency.   I didn't know what anxiety was until it hit me like a train several months before gastrointestinal issues began, so I can certainly relate.   Two books which helped me hugely were At Last A Life by Paul David (there is a website you can look up) and The Depression Cure: The Six-Step Programme to Beat Depression Without Drugs by Dr Steve Llardi.  Although his book is aimed at people who have depression, following the principals he sets out was so helpful in lessening my anxiety.  Llardi suggests we need to focus on getting enough: - physical exercise - omega-3 fatty acids - natural sunlight exposure - restorative sleep - social connectedness - meaningful, engaging activity   ... and we should feel a lot better. That is not to stay you must stop taking medication for depression or anxiety if you have been prescribed it, but adopting the changes Dr Llardi sets out in the book should really help. Can I just ask two more questions:  1) you say that you are B12 deficient, did they test your iron levels too?  If not, you really ought to be checked for deficiency and, 2) did they check your thyroid function, as an overactive thyroid can be cause rapid heartbeat and a lot of coeliacs have thyroid issues? Cristiana        
×
×
  • 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.