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The Food Doctor

Anti-allergy foods

There are allergies, and there are sensitivities.  Allergists insist that an allergy can only be diagnosed by specific tests, and that people who say they’re “allergic to” some food or other environmental element are often not technically allergic.  Basically, it doesn’t matter what you call it:  if the food or element specifically affects you in a negative way, we have a problem and it’s worth attending to.

 

Foods most commonly considered allergenic include milk and milk products, eggs, soy, nuts, corn, peanuts, tomatoes, and shellfish.  Different individuals may react to others as well.  In addition, pollen, cats, dander, and the like may also cause unpleasant symptoms.  Avoiding whatever it is you’re allergic to is, obviously, step number one. 

 

Step number two:  In my experience, eliminating milk products from one’s diet can help diminish the symptoms of other allergies.  It’s worth a try, as so many people respond positively.  And don’t worry about the calcium issue – just eat plenty of leafy greens, just like the cows, and you’ll have that covered! 

 

Enhancing the gut flora may be helpful as well.  Consuming naturally fermented vegetables (no vinegar), such as sauerkraut, brine pickles, and unpasteurized miso (in soups and salad dressings), will provide some pro-biotic elements.  I would suggest two tablespoons of sauerkraut per day – see recipe below.

 

For cat allergies, my friend Carol Ellis, who is an MD and herbalist, recommends tincture of mullein.  When I used to have cats, and an allergic person came to visit, I used to give them a glass of water with two droppersful of mullein, and their symptoms would abate as long as they sipped their water throughout the evening.  I refilled the glass whenever necessary.

 

Natural sauerkraut recipe:  Cut a small cabbage in quarters, top to bottom, and cut out the core.  Slice the quarters into thin strips, and spread out over your cutting board or table.  Sprinkle good seasalt all over it, trying to visualize a thin film of salt only one grain thick all over the cabbage.   You’re better off using a little too much rather than too little.  Gather it all and put in a crock or non-metal pot (porcelain or glass is fine).  Put a plate on top with some weights, to press down.  Place in a dark and cool spot.  Next day, take a look:  enough water should have been released to cover the cabbage.  If not, add some warmed water, with one teaspoon of seasalt per cup,  stir well, and pour in as much as needed to cover the cabbage by one inch.  Let sit about a week;  remove anything that is sitting on top of the water.  Pour into a clean glass jar with the water and  keep covered in the fridge.  Enjoy in lieu of salad!

Annemarie Colbin, Ph.D.

Published 12 May 2008 11:15 by Bryan Hubbard

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Recipe » Anti-allergy foods said:

May 12, 2008 13:24
 

siobhanmckeeney said:

I have been suffering from some sort of allergy for years. Its causes severes bout of sneezing,itchy eyes and runny nose. I used to take a nasal spray from doctors but decided to look for an alternative solution. I have tried an Homeopathic who prescribed Euphrasia  with no luck and then Nat Mur. my attacks have been continual evry day for the past 2 weeks and i'm feeling so misearble. My Homeopath says its early days yet for recovery but I am very doubtful. Anyone got any ideas?

May 13, 2008 22:36
 

Kathryn Jordan said:

It's still early in the season yet, but I haven't seemed to be suffering with hayfever quite as much as normal.  I usually have a bout in late April - a lull - and then again in July, with quite a bit of intermittent sneezing in between.  The most irritating symptom for me is itching eyes, and the wake up instant nose run making it impossible to get back to sleep (throw in a couple of sneezes while you're at it).  But the early nose water works have happened only twice so far, and I've had very little eye itching.  Last week's newsletter mentioned a connection between good gut flora and hayfever, and I went, ah ha! because I started drinking a glassful of kefir every morning about two months ago.  

May 14, 2008 07:38
 

Ship said:

Sorry AnneMarie

But I have to strongly take issue with your first step.

>>>

Avoiding whatever it is you’re allergic to is, obviously, step number one.

>>>

This is way too simplistic, and may in fact make the problem worse. MUCH worse, as it did in my case.

The problem is that by avoiding a food you often become hypher-sensitive to it. And sooner or later someone will accidentally slip whatever it is you are trying your damnedest  to avoid into your food.

No in my experience the rotational diversified died is FAR more effective.

I know of a woman who was put into a coma by eating a small piece of beef. This happened in front of dis-believing doctors in a hospital, after a short fast.

When I met her years later she was cheefully munching beef.

So you see it is much more complex that you might think.

Ship

P.S.

Her solution? Very careful, very strict rotation of foods. Eat all you like for one entire day and than at least 4 or 5 days completely clear of that food.

May 14, 2008 17:04
 

Laura Gestes said:

I am NOT allergic (sensitive) to lamb and turkey and 4 vegetables! I am able to live a fairly normal life, work 40 hrs a week, etc. because of the rotated diet. But, I can tell a difference very quickly if I indulge in sugar, wheat, coffee, or milk products. My asthma and the "eternal itch" kicks in very quickly, as well as memory problems and foggy thinking. And, don't forget the insominia that goes with all of it as well. Eat tomatoes and the sinus symptoms start. These food allergies run in my family. Eating the rotated diet is the only thing that will work consistantly. If you find that you still don't tolerate something then you should leave it alone until you stop reacting to that food. It took a year or more for me to stop reacting to beef and pork (swelling and migraines). I can eat either now without enough reaction to make me uncomfortable, but I don't try to eat either more than once a week as  I know I could end up back like I was. Don't rotate just the foods that cause a big reaction, rotate all your foods for best results. If you slip up, just get right back on the diet and go from there. The health rewards are worth the bother.

May 20, 2008 15:35
 

dgtucker said:

The question is, why do people develop alergies and intolerences and the answer maybe and often is, due to poor gut function/leaky gut syndrome.Sort out the digestive system...and often you will sort the problems.After all, if your digestive system is not functioning well, then you will be 'malnourished' and therefore open to all kinds of nutritionally related health problems.

Logic...not rocket science!

May 20, 2008 16:44
 

Trish Niblock said:

I am hyper sensitive to formaldehyde!

I cannot go into an office that has man made carpets curtains ... I feel my chest tightening!  Unfortunately mdf  - used in DIY has formaldehyde in its pungent glue so when it is being shaped the molecules are in the air and even newspapers and magazines have it too.

Why it is necessary for us to be surrounded by these toxic substances I dont know!

I went to see a medic who also checks  the body for allergies and up came formaldehyde along with  all the things one has eaten in the past without a problem milk, sugar, wheat.........

Now after ONE Ibroprufen pill and a nasty allergic reaction in that my chest tightened up completely and I could only breathe very gently with my diaphragm ...

I find I am allergic to salt!

After nearly a year I can now take a tiny amount of salt as long as I drink a cup full of hot water first.

Trish Niblock

May 20, 2008 17:03
 

May Cameron said:

In my work as an Allergy Therapist in Hereford I come across many people with allergy problems.  I use homeopathic remedies to de-sensitize the body.  These can be very effective for all sorts of problems.  These remedies are taken in drop form for one week.  

I also use the four day rule when re-introducing food back into the diet.

May 20, 2008 22:12
 

Ship said:

The our relationship between food is a complex and controversial one.

Medics tend to have had little training in this area. In fact I was once treated by a GP who came out with the immortal line "Gut problems are confined to the gut". IMHO, he should either have been shot or put in a museum, but suffice-it to say I sacked him on the spot for his naivity.

There was a famous experiment done many years ago on Guinnea pigs. In this experiment, if they injected a small quantity of egg-white into the blood of the animals they died of anaphylactic shock. HOWEVER if you took a control group which had been eating eggs for several months in their diet... they were fine!

So what does this prove? To me it indicates that there may be some mechanism in the body of a mammal that tells the system NOT to attack things that it finds in the gut as being foreign invaders. ...But that for some reason(s) (e.g. reasons of perhaps a combination of mental/emotional stress, polution, parasites - who knows?!) this mechanism may not always work correctly.

What I find interesting is that in my case I found that if I ate a LARGE amount of wheat (say 2 or 3 pieces of toast) in a meal I got away with it much better than if I ate small amount (say a hint of flour in the gravy).  

I also find that the FIRST DAY after a gap tends to be more or less okay - and this seems to lend the logic to the other observation that strict rotation helps.

But I am interested in what other people on this thread have found. When you re-introduce a food you are sensitive to how much of it are you using?

And have anyone else found that eating a relatively huge amount (in one meal) of a food you are sensitive to works better than eating trace amounts?

Ship

May 21, 2008 11:19
 

Pamela Stead said:

I have several allergies, including wheat, gluten etc. cat (I have had a cat for years, but only recently has she started sitting on my knee and following me around.  I also suffered from chronic rhinitis and also had nasal sprays prescribed, but ended up with nosebleeds which often lasted more than 4 days (hopitalised for treatment).  I had hayfever as a child, but my most recent remedy which seems to be working for me is Quercetin capsules (I take one a day of Quercetin with Bromelaine) from Holland and Barratt and they seem to do the trick.  Try them!!!!

May 22, 2008 01:38
 

Joe Everett said:

For Siobhan

As a Registered Homeopath I would support what practitioner says, without knowing your history can I assume you have Hayfever. This can if you have not been informed can take some two or three seasons to rectify

One thing you can ask your practitioner is what's their opinion of repeated low dose potentised concurrent remedies such as pollens and grasses etc. Obviously if you could pin point the casuing agent so much the better! Plus please bear in mind the following as you can see the season for sneezes is virtually all year round.

If your symptoms start in early spring, the probable culprit is Tree pollen.

If your symptoms that start around mid-May are likely to be Grass pollen.

Weed pollen can cause problems late summer and autumn, whilst spores’ tend to become airborne from Sept, they can also be problematic in June and July.

Jan to Apr ALDER

Feb to Mar         HAZEL

Feb to Apr         ELM

Feb to Apr         WILLOW

Apr to May BIRCH

Apr to Jun         RAPESEED

May COMMON CHESTNUT

May to Aug         GRASSES

Jun to Jul                   LIME

Jun to Aug         MUGWORT

Jul to Sept       NETTLES

Jul to Oct         DOCK

Good luck Joe

May 22, 2008 17:32
 

harradine said:

Ship I am sorry to hear that your GP is so behind the times.

Gut health is a very big issue right now, taken very seriously indeed by many in the medical profession.  What a shame your GP was not up to speed.

May 23, 2008 00:09

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