(Part 2) Top products from r/FoodAllergies

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We found 9 product mentions on r/FoodAllergies. We ranked the 28 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/FoodAllergies:

u/jly3598 · 2 pointsr/FoodAllergies

It is so sweet of you to try do this for her!

With the coconut and nut allergy you’re going to have to make the ice cream. You’ll need a small ice cream maker. I have this one and it works well for small batches.

Cuisinart ICE-21 1.5 Quart Frozen Yogurt-Ice Cream Maker (White) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B003KYSLMW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_GDs4DbG40WRR3

You can make it out of any safe milk. Ripple milk is good, it’s made out of peas and it’s the closest to dairy milk. Just find instructions and substitute the safe milk for dairy milk.

It will probably take a few batches until you figure out one that tastes good.

After that, the candy shell. The recipes I have seen are all chocolate + coconut oil. You could try to substitute crisco, the organic vegan products like crisco, or even lard. Enjoy life makes allergy friendly dark chocolate chips you could use. I don’t know if any of these would work but you can try! If they don’t work you can always just have ice cream with chocolate sauce or chunks.

If you want a great book on allergy cooking check out this one.

The Allergy-Free Pantry: Make Your Own Staples, Snacks, and More Without Wheat, Gluten, Dairy, Eggs, Soy or Nuts https://www.amazon.com/dp/1615192085/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_WNs4DbNSA7B0S

Let us know how the ice cream (and hopefully Klondike bars) turns out!

u/Anianna · 1 pointr/FoodAllergies

There are several varieties of keychain pill fobs on Amazon, too. I prefer the rounded style ones like these: https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B000P91E4C but https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B0012DLILE are good, too.

u/nbx909 · 2 pointsr/FoodAllergies

You might try making your own with zinc oxide. Though it seems like the most common carrying agents are nut oils.

After looking at commerical ones, it looks like this coppertone advertises as hypoallergenic: https://smile.amazon.com/Coppertone-UltraGuard-Lotion-SPF-50/dp/B000GG146C?sa-no-redirect=1&th=1 the only thing to be concerned about is the fragrance but you could do a skin test with it and see.

u/shinelime · 1 pointr/FoodAllergies

http://www.amazon.com/ADMS-Anti-Allergen-Spray-32-oz/dp/B0010DLYR4

I use this in my house and have noticed a difference. Might be worth checking out.

u/larkasaur · 3 pointsr/FoodAllergies

The best way to figure out food sensitivities is:

First, get tested for celiac disease.

Then, do a hypoallergenic elimination diet, where you don't eat common food allergens or anything that you habitually eat, for at least a week. Followed by food challenges with the foods you eliminated, meaning that you try a single food (one plant species or one animal species) at a time, and wait at least a couple days to see what happens and wait for any reaction to clear up before trying the next food. The link has elimination diets of varying strictness.

Ideally the food challenges would be blind, so you don't know what you're eating, but that's difficult and not often done.