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Monday, September 19, 2011

Birthday food- with a Peanut(s) theme

Apparently my previous post on peanuts resonated with many of my friends as it seemed to be the topic of choice at my birthday celebration. It began with Liz's sister-in-law, Laurie, sweeping peanut dust and crumbs that she had accumulated at the Braves game, out of her purse onto the patio furniture and floor. As i was squirming my friend Elizabeth was lightly mentioning... oh no peanuts... claire is allergic. She reads my blog!

elizabeth, me and julie at The Marlay
As it turns out Laurie's son is also allergic to peanuts, which she later relayed to us in a story about how she once felt like the worst mother in the world because her son ate some thanksgiving turkey fried in peanut oil. Of course he later had anaphylactic systems and she, as a mother and a nurse, felt horrible for not realizing that peanut oil was used to fry the turkey. I had a similar experience with almost eating a peanut-fried turkey, so i know the feeling. On a side note, she did not know i was allergic to peanuts when she was cleaning them right out of her purse onto the table, but she sure found out quickly! Thanks friends!

some of my loot and 1/2 a st. bernardus!
Later Shellie mentioned something about how i should take the day off of work on my birthday and have some of the delicious peanut butter pie at Java Monkey. Ah, i said, but i am allergic...  which happened about the same time everyone else at the table said "READ THE BLOG". Which is when elizabeth all but quoted my blog post and said "you are one of those friends that never remembers she is allergic". Everyone got a good laugh but luckily no one got a peanut butter pie for me. I got a Bruster's ice cream pie (like a cake w/o the cake) just as i requested.

Bruster's caramel apple pie! Yum!
The next day i begrudgingly went to work after having to psych myself up for a good hour. I promised myself i could leave at lunch (which i did not) and convinced myself it would be better to be at work than at home (it wasn't). However, there were a few bright spots to day, one of which being when my friend Dr. Maloof stopped by my office to give me my peanut themed gift.

This was the outside of the gift, with the appropriate packaging and note!
She remembered my birthday because her son's birthday is exactly one week before mine. Great people were born in September, i say! Nevertheless her gift was funny and right on track with the peanuts theme. Here is what the inside of the bag looked like!

very cute inside warning label for my gift!
And now for the peanut gift....

this cup is so appropriate in so many ways!
So, Dr. Maloof I am confronting the peanuts, with cartoons not legumes! and the life is hard part too!
Well it looks like my blog post about peanuts worked. Now most of my friends are aware I am allergic to peanuts, it was partially the topic of discussion at my BD soiree and I got a Bruster's ice cream pie!


Happy Eating! Especially birthday eating!

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Yogurt is the new taco... Yogurt Tap and more

Or maybe the new burger? At least in Atlanta it seems that food trends have followed the lines of taco joint, burger joint and now yogurt joint.

Farm Burger... A burger joint

Taqueria del Sol, Decatur- A taco joint!

This new phase reminds me of the TCBY craze in the 1980's. Remember when you used to die for their chocolate and vanilla swirl? Then they finally got another machine and it was the wildest thing that you had a choice other than chocolate, vanilla and the swirl. It was the most happening thing in town for the longest time and so exciting to walk in and see what the "other" machine had to offer that week. Now, you'd be lucky to find a TCBY. Naturally there is still one in Monroe, LA, but i have not seen one anywhere else since the early 90's.


Nevertheless as just as leggings and leg warmers have come back in style, so has yogurt. However, these yogurt joints are now self-serve. A sign of the economy maybe, or perhaps just a sign of the times with all the self-serve kiosks and checkout lanes that are supposed to save time but always seem to take longer. Sometimes that is the case with yogurt too! Keep reading...

They just don't make them like this anymore. TCBY has a drive thru and now we have to serve ourselves!

The first of these newfangled yogurt joints that i became familiar was Yogurt Tap in Decatur. http://www.theyogurttap.com. Admittedly the first two times i tried Yogurt Tap i did not like it. Since it has been around for a couple of years i don't really remember what i did not like about it, i just know it did not warrant more than two visits. Undoubtedly one issue was their lack of parking. Due to it being on the Decatur Square, you basically have to be on foot to go to Yogurt Tap as there is literally no where to park unless you are lucky enough to score one of the four places out front. But it was getting good reviews on Decatur Metro blog www.decaturmetro.com and it always seemed to be happening so i felt like i should give it another chance.


About six months ago or I was in walking distance of Yogurt Tap and decided to give it another try. I mostly did this because i like to eat, but also because I had heard my friend Melissa talk about how she and Lauren go there almost once a week. Oh, and they love it, by the way. I thought I had to be missing something, so i decided to try it again.

Here is what it looks like from the outside.
On a side note I probably need some therapy for this affliction as i tend to try things over and over hoping for a different result, especially if other people seem to be getting a different result. Insanity? Anyway, at least in this instance it worked. Maybe it was the flavors they were serving, maybe they have improved since they opened or maybe the stars were aligned, but the third time was the charm.


After i finished that big ole cup of yogurt I called Melissa and told her that after three tries, spanning almost 1.5 years i finally liked Yogurt Tap. In fact, i liked it so much i wish it had better parking so i could eat it more often. Not only that, I ate it 2 times over the Decatur Book Festival weekend... and have eaten it three times in the last week... Now I am hooked too. In fact, I think I'll walk up there after i finish this blog post!



However, there are a few other downsides to Yogurt Tap. First it seems to have become the hangout for Decatur middle and high school students anytime between 2 pm and 6pm. The kids essentially flood the place and of course at that age have no concept that other people exist. Secondly, they only have 3 machines equalling 9 taps. Not only does that mean the flavors are limited, it also means there is a bottleneck at the yogurt bar, especially when people can't seem to make a decision. I mean you've basically got 9 choices (and that is counting the 3 swirls)... And you can even get them all if you want! Get your yogurt and move on! Thirdly, you spend so much time standing in line behind people deciding what toppings they want at the toppings bar, your yogurt almost melts. Again, how hard is it to make a decision?

the infamous toppings bar
I never want toppings... see post on the aforementioned peanut allergy... so i don't want to stand in line behind an entire family of people discussing toppings as they gently sprinkle one of each topping on their yogurt. I'm not sure of the proper yogurt etiquette here, but i think it should be ok for me to skip in front of them it if is going to take them FOR-ever to top their yogurt. Besides, I can make a decision. Yogurt, pay, eat...


But Yogurt Tap has some competition and you might prefer Red Mango or Menchies which in typical Atlanta fashion are less than a mile away from but seem oh so far. Atlanta is the only city i have ever lived in where there are 3 Publix's within a one mile radius, because lord knows it would be too difficult to drive 2 miles to get groceries. Nothing like some urban sprawl.

See all those green dots covering Atlanta? Those are all the Publix locations. And that is just one of our grocery store chains!
Speaking of, another yogurt shop is now set to open in walking distance of Yogurt Tap, this one called Swirlin' and Twirlin'. There new storefront boasts that they will have 40 flavors and the parking is also better at its location. Of course it might give my favorite New Orleans Snowball Shop a run for its money when it first opens, but hopefully the business will eventually level out.



All this aside, I hate to say it but my favorite yogurt joint is Orange Leaf in Monroe. LA http://orangeleafyogurt.com/. In typical Monroe fashion the line was out the door the first few months it was open but now you can walk in and choose from its many flavors of yogurt in more varieties than you can imagine. I am assuming the new Swirlin' and Twirlin' will be similar to Orange Leaf which admittedly has a more corporate feel than Yogurt Tap.

Inside the Orange Leaf

Certainly variety is not necessary and TCBY made it on chocolate, vanilla and the ever popular and genius swirl! Remember when that was new? We had never seen pre-swirled yogurt before! Anyway I digress... So maybe the variety of 40 flavors isn't all its cracked up to be, but certainly is more fun. Variety is the spice of life after all!
Cherries at the Union Square Farmers Market- NYC

Happy Eating!

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Longhorn... Shhhh!

I don't eat at chain restaurants. I could go the rest of my life without eating at another chain restaurant. I ate at a chain restaurant. 
These are just a few of the places I avoid!

It must have been the long week i had, or the work drama i was having to deal with, or simply an abundance of apathy welling up inside me, but it was bound to happen sooner or later. Melissa convinced me to eat at a chain restaurant. I still am not quite sure how she was able to do this but it started with us discussing our eating options for the evening. She wanted a steak. I wanted "something good!", which meant i needed comfort food and didn't want something ordinary or common.

Due to my fried "end of the work week" brain or low energy I couldn't put my finger on exactly what i wanted. However, Melissa kept mentioning that steak and now stated she wanted a $20 steak not a $42 steak. Well, that eliminated Parker's on Ponce and a few other Decatur favorites and that is when Melissa uttered those dirty words.... She could eat at Longhorn! No, i said.. ugh... i'm not eating there. So I started at the end of West Ponce and listed each restaurant attempting to find something we could both agree on. She threw out a few and nothing she mentioned sounded good to me, just as nothing i mentioned sounded good to her. I was in an admittedly fussy mood and Melissa was dead set on a steak, therefore we could not seem to find anything we both wanted.


Finally i said "we live in Atlanta, it is not like we are still in Jackson (MS, where we both used to live) or Oak Ridge (LA, where i grew up, pop, 150) surely we can find something we want. At this point i could tell Melissa was getting fussy, was about to abort mission and was about to get take out from Moe's or something else equally as disgusting. Therefore in a moment of what must have been sheer boredom, tiredness, or insanity I said "After all this, hell i'll just go to Longhorn".


I know she couldn't believe it, hell i couldn't either. At this point all i wanted to do was get out of the house, eat something good and hang out. Therefore the food and atmosphere would have to sacrifice.

As we pulled into the Longhorn parking lot I immediately begin joking that we would be eating with the blue hairs. After all not only were we there before 6:30, we were also at Longhorn. She laughed but obviously didn't care and quite frankly we had both been up since 5:00AM so it was time for dinner.


Needless to say we had no problem finding parking and as we walked into the restaurant I started laughing because not only were we two of the twelve people there, we are the only people under 60. When the hostess sat us in the bar i thought, well at least she knows were we belong.


Before we even sat down Melissa knew what she wanted to order and i was still in shock that i was inside a chain restaurant. I was looking around like i was in foreign country or some sort of exhibit at Disney World. Our waitress appeared and immediately started the corporate spiel and asked us if we wanted to start out with some fancy-named drink or whatever appetizer they were promoting that month. I tire of this rhetoric easily and am already annoyed. Remember, I came here fussy.

They tried to sell us this and tried to sell it to the table behind us, and the table in front of us. There is so much paperwork it takes you a several minutes just to sort through all of it.
I quickly look over the menu so i can be ready to order and decide I'll have a steak. Shocking, i know. As i look around the restaurant i wonder who the other patrons are and realize i could never hang out at the Longhorn bar after work like two separate men appear to be doing. Why would you go here when a great bar/restaurant like Shorty's is in walking distance, I wonder?


For a few minutes i feel like i am in the twilight zone but oh well, i'm here, let's eat. We both get a salad, baked potato and a steak. The food was good. Nothing remarkable but nothing bad. The salad was your standard chain restaurant tossed salad that was average but not anything wonderful or different. The baked potato was good, as it should be since about the only way you can screw that up is to undercook it. The steak tasted fine. It was cooked properly but was a little salty for my taste. They must have some sort of seasoning shaker here with premixed seasonings as that is the type of flavor that is imparted. Or perhaps the saltiness came from all the butter and leftover seasonings on the grill? Who knows but I eventually had to stop eating it because all i could taste was salt.


As we finished our meal Melissa exclaimed that she loved Longhorn and wanted to come back. She went on and on about how she got the salad, potato and steak all for around $25. I understand her point since this is how i grew up eating and tend to expect a salad, baked potato and bread with my steak. But i don't tend to frequent these type of joints much anymore. For instance, if we would have gone to the aforementioned Parker's the price of the steak ($30) would have been just that... the price of the steak. If we wanted a salad or sides it would have been at least $10 more. Parkers is good, but i began to wonder if it was that good?


Before I was converted, I decide it is not so much the food that keeps me away from chain restaurants but its the atmosphere, ambiance and people. When i enter this Longhorn I could be in Decatur, Denver or Demorest and would not know the difference. I prefer places with local fare, that have character and reflect the local area. I don't like looking around and feeling like i am in a cookie cutter place in Anywhere, USA. When i go to the Brick Store I know i am in Decatur and when i go to Johnny's Pizza i know i am in Monroe, LA.

The Brick Store Pub

Furthermore while i am sure our server lives in the area, I don't get that vibe. It's almost as if she is from out-of-town visiting Atlanta for the week. The bartender looked like Flo from Mel's Diner and the canned corporate sound bites the servers are required to recite at each table along with the fact they are all dressed identically does not impart a hometown feel. Not only does this make me feel like i am not getting personal service it also makes me feel like i am talking to a robot.

A true restaurant robot dispensing food.

I am used to servers that live around the corner, know my name or at the very least seem like real people. When i go to a restaurant i like to get the feel that i can sit back and stay awhile. I like to be treated as a person and i like to feel some connection to the menu, the people and the atmosphere.

Loved this show! This pic makes me want to watch some episodes!

It is not likely you'll go to Longhorn and become friends with the servers (like we have at Avondale Pizza) because they are too busy reciting their lines to talk to you. It is also not likely you'll stay awhile because they focus on you coming in, eating and leaving, and you'll never get to know the owner (like I have at Taqueria del Sol, AP, BSP, The Pig, and a few other places), because the owner is some corporation in a far away land.


All in all everything is just too corporate for me. Yes the food is predictable or consistent as some folks say, but so is everything else.


The steak was fine, I got to hang out with my friend and i survived the experience. But again, it is not that the food is horrible, it is the rest of the story that makes me want to visit the locally owned joints. The food is average, not bad enough to complain, good enough to go back in a pinch. But the chain restaurant vibe, the robotic identically dressed servers, the corporate menu, the exact measurements of alcohol and my fellow clientele are what make me want to run as fast as i can to the first locally owned joint i can find.

Shorty's is across the parking lot from Longhorn, and damn good!
But as we were leaving the joke turned on me. The parking lot was now full and there was even a wait for tables. Apparently there is a market for this type of food and atmosphere. I am surprised as i would think people only eat at chains when they are traveling and either don't have time to find the local fare or are scared to be adventurous. Nevertheless, Melissa loved telling me we had just eaten at the hottest place in Decatur. "Well, we're really in Toco Hills" i stated, as we headed back to the land where there is not a chain in sight. Ah, home sweet Decatur.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Eating with a food allergy- Peanuts

This weekend at one of my favorite events of the year, The Decatur Book Festival, i listened to an author discuss her book Don't Kill the Birthday Girl. The title stems from a common statement made in her childhood due to her multitude of food allergies. You see she is allergic to a long list of foods but her allergies are so severe a lone hug or a kiss from a relative who had recently indulged in the "real" birthday cake that contained dairy, could actually kill the her.

Therefore her birthday parties consisted of her special cake and then another cake for the rest of the guests. Once the cake for the guests was served it was if a force field had to be created around her to prevent an allergic reaction.


This discussion of food allergies got me thinking about  my own food allergy, peanuts. I get all kinds of questions about my allergy when people first learn about it. The most common ones i hear are

"When did you find out you were allergic? " (i've always known, i don't remember not knowing)

"How allergic are you?" (allergic, that is kind of like asking how pregnant are you) and

"What happens if you eat a peanut?" (i'll die, any other questions?)

These answers usually raise a few eyebrows, sometimes as if I am not telling the truth, especially when i give the i'll die answer.
Cute peanuts....

When i was growing up I was the only person i knew that had a peanut allergy and never met anyone else that shared my ailment. Now peanut allergies are fairly rampant among young children and many initiatives are being developed both at schools and by grassroots organizations to raise awareness regarding the seriousness of this allergy. But in the 1980's there was no such awareness and nothing that even remotely resembled an epi-pen. Sometimes i think it is a miracle i lived through elementary and high school with all the baked goods that trickled through the school and lack of preventative measures for children with allergies.

Bad peanuts...

Based on the author's testimony regarding her issues dealing with food allergies I got to thinking about my own experiences. Ironically enough (and contrary to the issues of kids today) i don't remember it being terribly difficult to deal with my allergy while in school. I basically always asked if cookies or brownies had peanuts (or peanut butter) in them and then either gingerly tasted the treat or steered clear. Perhaps there were more behind the scenes efforts from my teachers or my mother to encourage parents not to send peanut laden treats to school, but I was unaware of them. Perhaps it was because i attended a small school and everyone knew of my allergy and simply didn't send peanut butter cookies or brownies to school, but again, I'm not sure. I simply remember it not being a huge issue.

I like putting pictures of The Peanuts here as the pictures of actual peanuts make me nervous.







Needless to say i never felt my inability to eat peanut butter sandwiches deprived me as a child and since i don't really have a sweet tooth i was not too upset about missing the occasional brownie or cookie. In addition to the questions above sometimes people ask me if i've "ever just wanted to eat a peanut butter sandwich?", which is a question only a person without a food allergy would ask and "if i'm allergic to all nuts"? The answer to both is, no!


You see, peanuts are actually legumes and grow underground, so they are technically not nuts. Therefore most people that are allergic to peanuts are not allergic to nuts, and vice versa. In response to the other question, I've never had peanut products and not being able to have them is not like fighting off a midnight craving for ice cream. I don't want a PB&J and I cringe anytime someone mentions peanuts, peanut butter or peanut oil. I can't even bear to put pictures of them on this post. In fact, if there was ever a cure for food allergies, i wouldn't eat peanuts, i would just be happy not to have to continue to be ultra-careful about everything i eat.

In my experience, my food allergy has been more difficult to deal with the older i have gotten. Again, this may simply be based on the environment in which i am living, but i find myself being more careful now than i ever was in my childhood. Two things that have changed about my environment are 1. that i live in big city with lots of food choices and 2. we are now living in a  foodie culture where entire networks are devoted to food and restaurant style cooking.


These lifestyle changes affect my allergy because not only am i exposed to many different varieties of food from all cultures, I am also exposed to chefs and home cooks that are experimenting with ingredients that were once exotic or difficult to find. For example did any of you have chicken satay in the 1980's or know a restaurant that fried their food in peanut oil? Me either, however today those are common occurrences in your everyday restaurant (or wedding reception or party).


Growing up i basically ate American fare with some Mexican and Italian food thrown in for good measure and admittedly lived in a small town with few choices when it came to eating out. Now i can have any type of ethnic food i choose and anyone can go to the local grocery and buy peanut oil, which most likely became popular with the fried Thanksgiving turkey.


However, just as i was thinking that my allergy had been relatively easy to manage I remembered some incidents that certainly had the potential to be worse than they were. For example not long after i moved to Atlanta i went to a party at a local restaurant where a buffet was set up. Being the voracious eater i am i was first in line at the buffet and acquired my plate full of food. After finishing round one I went back for seconds and dessert. I got a small piece of cheesecake and subsequently ate it. At this point in my life i knew to stay away from any brown desserts as they are most likely to contain peanut butter, but i did not know to stay away from the tongs that the brown desserts might have touched. As soon as i ate the cheesecake i knew something was wrong.

This looks yummy for you, but signals danger for me!
Not wanting to alarm the table or ruin everyone's evening I immediately starting drinking more of my beer, thinking the alcohol might kill the foreign substance in my body. I then went to the bathroom and washed out my mouth and finally had to swallow my pride and tell my friend Melissa to take to me home. That was the night I learned :

1. buffets are not my friend
2. people don't know how to use the appropriate tongs for the appropriate dessert
3. even a trace of peanut butter on a tong can cause a reaction and
4. don't get seconds

Not long after that i went to Louisiana for a holiday and was having dinner with my friend Karen and her family. Her son was about 3 years old at the time and didn't want to eat the traditional fare. Therefore he ate a PB&J sandwich. As i was getting ready to leave Conner kissed me on the cheek. Uh-oh, who knew this would cause an allergic reaction? I had to high-tail it home to get some benadryl because i didn't even know epi-pens existed. The reaction seemed to continue to get worse and at one point i thought i was going to have to go to the hospital. Truthfully that is what i should have done.

That was the day i learned:
1. kisses (even on the cheek) from someone that has recently eaten peanut products could be deadly.

Benadryl is my friend!

There have been other incidents too. Like the one at a Chinese restaurant where some peanut sauce got on a dumpling i ate (put in my mouth and spit out) and my lips swelled bigger than a Beverly Hills housewife. That time i actually had to use my epi-pen (of course it was at home) and was later scolded by my allergy doctor for not going to the hospital. That was the day i learned:

1. never to leave home without my epi-pen (i had gotten one by this time)
2. to be very careful of brown sauces when eating dim sum
3. even if you don't ingest the peanuts it can be deadly and
4. to always go to the ER when you use your epi-pen.


I learned another lesson the time i spent almost the entire flight to Europe in the bathroom because who knew airlines use peanut oil to preserve their hot food? I felt certain i would die right over the middle of the Atlantic because no matter how many times i punched that call button, no one came. Eating on a plane has never been the same since.


Luckily these incidents have been few and far between. Mostly my allergy involves me avoiding certain foods due to the possibility of them containing peanut products, me always asking the eye-brow raising question of "what type of oil do you fry in" at restaurants and me doing research before eating at a restaurant to see if they have peanut products on their menu. Naturally higher end restaurants are typically more accommodating of patrons with allergies and ethnic restaurants where there is a language barrier signal danger for me.


I've succumbed to the fact i could never be a bona-fide food critic because i could never taste anything with peanut products and become accustomed to people not understanding the seriousness of food allergies. I've discovered most people think a food allergy is like those nasty spring allergies where people who are allergic to pollen develop a cold they fight off with OTC drugs and after a week or two of feeling like they are living in a tunnel, they are all better. They don't realize food allergies are deadly.


In fact my friends and family fall into one of three categories when it comes to their level of understanding.
  1. those that have known me for a long time, know about my allergy, and never serve anything with peanuts when they know i'll be in attendance. Sometimes they even look out for me when we are eating together and many times become the smeller or taster to determine if an item has peanuts.
  2. those that completely do not understand and say things like "how allergic are you?" implying that i could eat a peanut or two and be ok or "why don't you just take a benadryl?" at which point i know they need a biology 101 lesson or think its ok to have peanut products around as long as i don't eat them.
  3. those that i have told millions of times, but yet can't seem to remember i am allergic to peanut products. They give me peanut butter balls for Christmas, make peanut butter cookies and bring to my house, let their kids eat peanut butter cookies and then expect me to hold and play with their kids and their nasty peanut butter hands and faces. They've even been known to give me peanut butter candy for Halloween or Easter.

Listen, i know not everyone can know about my allergy and unless you eat with me the discussion has probably not come up. But when you have known me for 5 plus years, we've shared numerous meals together and and subject has been broached numerous times, i do expect you to remember i don't want a peanut butter pie for my birthday.

A Bruster's Ice Cream Cake will do!

In my quest to deal with my peanut allergy there have been other issues, too. At one point i was convinced my crazy ex-boyfriend was going to kill me by putting peanuts into my food. Another time i went to a gumbo cook-off and noticed a sign next to one of the pots that said "contains peanuts". Who puts peanut butter in gumbo? That day i realized:

1. don't date psychopathic ex-cops with a mesomorphic body type, well i knew that before the cookoff, but anyway...
2. i could not eat at any cook-offs or similiar food tasting events

While someone here had the sense to label the bowl most people would not. I realized i could have died that day because I typically looked for peanuts in the obviously places (cookies, brownies) but never looked for them in gumbo. In fact that reminded of a story some years earlier when a boy died after eating chili with peanuts in it. Again, who puts peanuts in chili?


Probably one of the biggest issues i have is peanuts on airplanes. As soon as i bring this up the inexperienced air traveler chimes in and says "they don't serve peanuts on planes anymore." I am here to tell you they do. I get sick almost every time i fly and cringe anytime someone sitting next to me orders peanuts. After getting sick so many times, i have become that crazy lady that wipes down the armrest and tray table before using it. I can't tell you how many times i have pulled down the tray table in anticipation of my drink and found it littered with peanut dust and sometimes even leftover peanuts. I am not sure how often these planes are cleaned, but i know from experience they are not cleaned between each flight like they are supposed to be.


I got so sick of getting sick, before one flight i decided to alert the airline to my allergy. First of all this is not easy because you cannot do it online and cannot attach it to your frequent flyer profile. You can request a vegetarian meal online, or a wheelchair, but even with the recent interest in peanut allergies there is no pull-down menu for peanut allergy. Finally i called the airline to alert them but when it came time to check-in i noticed i could not check in online. When i got to the airport, i also could not check in at the kiosk. Therefore i had to stand in the looonnnggg line of people with "problems" to simply check in. I almost missed my flight and was greeted by a flight attendant who said "uh, how allergic to peanuts are you?".

Love Delta, hate ASA!

I really didn't know how to answer that question since the plane had obviously not been cleaned and I thought it was policy for the airline not to serve peanuts if anyone on the plane alerted them to an allergy. After what i had just gone through to check in, i thought that was the least they could do. "I mean", she said as if i was ruining her day "i'm just trying to figure out if you are allergic to the dust or just the nuts". I still didn't know how to answer that without being completely rude, at which time she just exclaimed, "I guess i just won't offer them".

Of course i called and complained but also learned it was easier for me to board a plane with handy-wipes, nose spray and Allegra than it was to ask the airline to care. I wish airlines didn't serve peanuts as is seems to be a small price to pay to save lives, but it is such a part of our culture to have peanuts on airplanes and such a huge money maker for peanut farmers that is likely to never happen.



I understand there is a fine line between imposing my allergy on others, but smoking used to be allowed on airplanes too. Get over it and get used to eating pretzels and biscott cookies (these are good). If you want peanuts bring your own, at least that will cut down on the peanut dust on my tray table, arm rest, Sky Miles magazine, seat, pillow, overhead bin, bathroom door and window shade.


Yes, there are things you never think about until you have a food allergy. You ever eat at Cold Stone Creamery? not me, that cold stone they would use to mix my ice cream was also used to mix the ice cream of the person before me that ordered reese's peanut butter cups. (see previous post about food trucks)

All in all managing my food allergy is a small portion of my life and not an issue when i eat at home, cook my own food or eat at trusted restaurants (that have no peanut products on the menu). But it can instantly become a big issue when peanut products appear in unexpected places or when you are learning where dangers may lie.

As a forensic science instructor I always tell my students, you never know what criminal attempts were foiled based on preventative measures, you only know what criminal attempts were successful. The same goes for food allergies. I am sure many more incidents could have occurred but didn't because i chose not to eat a cookie or eat at a particular restaurant or friends decided to make the cheesecake rather than the peanut butter pie for the party.

Yea! for cheesecake!


Think of it this way, food allergies kill just like gunshots do, but we have laws against shooting someone. We still don't have laws requiring restaurants to alert patrons to potential allergens and we still serve peanuts on planes knowing millions of children (and adults) are allergic to them. I am not saying you should not be able to eat your peanuts, i am saying this is a public health issue, just like smoking and while you can smoke all you want, you can't do it on a plane because of the known dangers to others. Let's apply the same reasoning to peanuts.

Happy Eating! hold the peanut products please!

PS- When i started this post my intention was to bring more awareness to food allergies as the talk at the DBF got me thinking about my own. I did not intend it to be a rant about serving peanuts on airplanes, it just turned out that way. :)