I love doing anti-yeast therapy. I see people with complex problems who have often been to many doctors and received only minimal benefit. Then I prescribe anti-yeast therapy and they become better. I find doing this therapy as a doctor so gratifying because I love to see people become better.

-- Dr. Bruce Semon

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Tips for Eating in Restaurants

Restaurant Survival Tips for Yeast Free/Wheat Free/Milk Free Diets

Revised January 1, 2006

This page was first presented as a handout at the Autism Society of Wisconsin in April,2002, by Lori Kornblum. It is revised and presented in our book, An Extraordinary Power to Heal (2003), Bruce Semon, M.D., Ph.D. and Lori Kornblum, and has been further revised since then. They also are the parents of an adolescent with autism who is on a yeast free, wheat free and dairy free diet. We hope that this is helpful information for people who are following any specialized diet and eat in restaurants.

1. Eat in good restaurants. The higher up the “food chain” you go, the more likely you are to find food that you or your child can eat. Cheaper and chain restaurants often use prepared and pre-packaged food sthat have additives and oils you can’t have. Good restaurants will cook what you can eat.

2. Order what you can eat. Good choices are: baked potatoes, plain, with butter on the side (if you eat butter), salad with lemon wedges, steamed vegetables IF AND ONLY IF they do not have oil on them (ask and ask again); broiled meat/chicken/fish–again ascertain that they have no added oil or margarine. Plain is the key to winning this game.

3. Bring extra food. Explain to the server that you/your child is highly allergic and you wouldn’t want to risk a reaction. Order salad, or sliced tomatoes, or some food and leave a big tip.

4. Avoid deep fried foods, such as french fried. Usually the oil is used for other foods, that may have gluten in them.

5. Ask questions, ask to read labels (what is vegetable oil, anyway?) Ask to talk to the chef. If the chef is offended, or won’t reveal secrets, order sliced tomatoes or other raw food.

6. Call ahead to place your order and discuss the menu with the chef. Most chefs really appreciate this.

7. In Chinese restaurants, if the oil used is OK for you/your child, you might be OK ordering stir fried vegetable/meat dishes without mushrooms and without soy sauce. Some Chinese restaurants will use the oil that you bring with you (Safflower or Canola oil).

8. Mediterranean restaurants often are good choices, because they use Olive Oil.

Please feel free to use this information for personal use, and to copy and distribute it. This page may be reprinted as an entire page on any other website, as long as the website properly credits the author and links back to http://www.nutritioninstitute.com. This page may be copied for other publication with our permission.

For more information on how to implement a special diet, complete with recipes, we recommend our books An Extraordinary Power to Heal (2003),Extraordinary Foods for the Everyday Kitchen (2003) and Feast Without Yeast(1999). An Extraordinary Power to Heal (2003) gives you detailed instructions, day by day and week by week, about how to eliminate toxic foods from your diets. We give you the recipes and menus to do this inExtraordinary Foods for the Everyday Kitchen (2003) and Feast Without Yeast(1999).