I’m back! After
a year and a half of writing two papers each week for graduate school, my final
course is almost completed. Thus,
I am eager to post about all I have learned about living with celiac over the
past year.
Let’s begin back in December, when my thoughtful fiancé took
me to a gluten free cooking class at Georgetown Market. During the class I talked with a
nutritionist who suggested I pursue further allergy testing as a result of
recent acute stomach pains. After
waiting for nearly three weeks, IGG testing gave me some insight to the
continued pains as it showed an allergy/sensitivity to 9 of the 14 tested foods
including: eggs, dairy, onions, strawberries, beef, oats, wheat, gluten (duh),
and almonds. From here the
nutritionist suggested I might suffer from Candida, and that I needed to follow
the extremely restrictive diet for the next six months in an effort to restore
my stomach’s bacteria and yeast to healthy levels.
Candida is a yeast overgrowth in the body where yeast
multiplies to unhealthy levels and overtakes the good bacteria in your body
resulting in unwanted symptoms. In
my case, the symptom was food allergies.
With yeast feeding off sugar, those on the Candida diet must rid any
unnatural sugars from their bodies. While the overall guidelines for the Candida diet varying
depending upon the doctor or nutritionist, there is a long list agreed upon
foods that cannot be consumed. Sugar
(in any form), yeasted breads, wheat, any refined grain (white rice), dairy, alcohol,
vinegar, mushrooms, pistachios, peanuts, farm
raised seafood, meat from animals grown with antibiotics, and melons –
honeydew, cantaloupe, and watermelon are included in this list. Additionally, my nutritionist made some
further boundaries to my diet. In
order to heal my stomach, I was not allowed to consume any of the flagged foods
on my allergy testing. She also
limited my fruit intake to two servings a day and my whole grained
carbohydrates to four servings a day, as the yeast can grow from the natural
sugars released during the digestion of these foods.
As I left my meeting with the nutritionist a wave of
helplessness ran over me as I began to imagine how I would survive. Learning I had Celiac was difficult
enough, but now I had to eliminate many of my remaining favorite foods…cheese,
chocolate, peanut butter and wine.
The beginning days seemed to inch along as I began the
search for foods and recipes I could safely consume. To my disbelief, the craving for sugary foods subsided after
the first week…but not my desire to enjoy a glass of Cooper’s Hawk’s red wine!
Having been on the diet now for nearly five months, I am
questioning whether my food allergies are a result of Candida or the gut damage
caused by Celiac. Those of us who
suffer from Celiac Disease are likely to have other food allergies or
intolerances, with eggs, dairy, and oats being quiet common. I have talked with several other
Celiacs who can eat eggs baked in breads, but feel great discomfort of consumed
in other forms. Additionally,
lactose intolerance is quite common for Celiacs and can sometimes be
compensated with the use of Lactaid.
Now, as I transition “off” of the diet and begin to reintroduce foods
back into my diet, there are two guidelines I will continue to follow. While I will occasionally buy a gluten
free sweet treat from a local bakery or an ice cream (with Lactaid) from
Grater’s, I will continue to use only unrefined sugars in my own recipes. Stevia, xylitol, and brown rice syrup
are excellent choices for those of you wanting to use unrefined sugars in your
diet. Buying antibiotic free meat
is the second guideline I will continue to follow. Let me just say, antibiotic free meats’ flavors far surpass
those of animals pumped with antibiotics.
With this, I will conclude my post by making five
recommendations of restaurants/delis in Indianapolis serving both gluten free
menu options and antibiotic free meat.





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