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Posted by my3guys
 - August 20, 2013, 10:58:18 AM
bump
Posted by callisto
 - October 17, 2011, 04:10:22 PM
My daughter is doing the baked milk as well.  She eats goldfish and cheezits at home, but I never send anything to school that looks like it has milk in it.

She eats buttermilk bread fine - it is a local brand.

Mainly I cook lots of muffins and freeze them.  This website has a lot of recipes.  I often add extra milk to the batter and sometimes stir in powdered milk for extra milk protein:

http://www.muffinrecipes.net/

Most of the recipes are really easy - just mix all the ingredients together and bake.

I am currently getting up the courage to try her with pancakes - I am sure the first ones I give her will be very thin and very well cooked!
Posted by jw
 - October 16, 2011, 11:56:36 PM
We've just joined the baked milk club too.  Yippee!  It is making for some confusing grocery trips now.  He can tolerate well-cooked, thin pancakes, so I can make something quicker than a full baking session at home.  Not everyone can use this option though.

Our list so far -
Goldfish crackers are by far his favorite.  I'm making it a practice right now to only buy the colored ones since none of them are flavor blasted.  DS understands he can only have Goldfish that I approve, and this is a simple way for others to make sure he has ones that are parent approved.

Chips Ahoy original cookies - the milk content is pretty low on these.  I never realized those chocolate chips weren't milk chocolate until now.

We haven't bought any, but I know from the past that one of the Tyson chicken nugget packages has milk since we always avoided that one before. 

Van de Kamp's has a new fish fillet option that has milk in the coating.  I think it was an 8 pack, 90 calorie per fillet.  DS liked them.

DS is sick at the moment, but Eggo waffles are next on our list to try.  They'd be great since DS could grab them himself.

I'm also thinking of maybe the Grands biscuits or cinnamon rolls as an occasional treat.  I sent a question to Pillsbury to ask if the whey in the rolls is in the rolls or the icing.

Are there any cereals that might fit the list?
Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 04:08:33 PM
Carefulmom
Member
Posted: 03.01.2010 at 12:46:17



That is really the hard part, as they get older and you want them to pay attention to symptoms, especially as they are on their own more and take more responsibility. Yet on the baked milk, if she has mild symptoms we pretty much ignore them, which is what the food allergy specialist at UCLA said to do. It is just hard to know how much symptoms is too much.


Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 04:08:00 PM
my3guys
Member
Posted: 02.28.2010 at 08:41:06



Ours depends on the symptom(s) and what ds wants to do and visually how he seems. He usually does not want to continue eating something once he feels symptoms (usually an itchy or hurting throat). I don't push him even though the symptoms appear mild. The good news is symptoms have never progressed past this.

I sometimes wonder about the psychological component too....but some foods he's fine with and others he's not, so who knows. I do want him to trust his instincts since he's proven to be anaphylactic to milk in uncooked form, so this is how we approach it.



2 children with allergies covering milk, eggs, peanuts,treenuts, soy, oas, seasonal allergies

1 child with chronic reflux
Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 04:07:04 PM
CMdeux
Moderator1
Posted: 02.27.2010 at 07:14:55



Our strategy (can't speak for D'smom, only us) has been to allow whatever doesn't bother DD.

That is, if she can TOLERATE her nose being a little runny or knowing that her lips are going to be itchy and puffy for a day or two... and she really WANTS to eat a slice of cheese anyway...

<shrug> we allow it.

Her tolerance seems to be a 24-48 hour 'allowance' kind of thing, though, at this point.

So there's probably no way that she could drink milk. The last time she tried yogurt, even, she started sneezing and her lips puffed up pretty badly-- the top one even split a little on her. She decided that four bites of yogurt just wasn't worth it...

Weirdly, though? She tolerates small amounts of strawberry Kefir. As others note-- quite hit and miss.

Because she's ten and has a lifetime of experience with allergic reactions from mild OAS all the way to grade IV anaphylaxis, we let her sort of dictate what is "okay" and what isn't. I just ask/remind her when I can see that her lips/eczema looks to be badly flared.

She loves pizza and cheese so much that she'll push the envelope with those. Not so much with ice cream or cookies or butter.

HTH.



"To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive." -Robert Louis Stevenson

USA
Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 04:06:14 PM
Carefulmom
Member
Posted: 02.26.2010 at 07:35:46



Can someone clarify something for me? Dd is on baked milk also. What do you consider not working? For example, if your child has some sneezing on the baked milk item, would you consider that to be not working, or would you keep giving it? Do you consider that it didn`t work if your child has any symptoms at all or just if your child had a lot of symptoms?


Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 04:05:39 PM
my3guys
Member
Posted: 02.26.2010 at 03:09:33



Same thing here. Very hit or miss on what works. It seems the lower the dairy is listed on the label, the better he does with it.



2 children with allergies covering milk, eggs, peanuts,treenuts, soy, oas, seasonal allergies

1 child with chronic reflux
Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 04:04:58 PM
GingerPye
Moderator
Posted: 02.26.2010 at 09:48:15



huh. Yeah, that is disappointing. Well, hopefully he is building up tolerance with every bite . . .



DD, 15 - MA/EA/PA/env./eczema
DS, 12 - MA/EA/PA/env./asthma
DH - adult-onset asthma
me - env. allergies, exhaustion, & mental collapse
Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 04:04:21 PM
Posted: 02.26.2010 at 09:25:23



Ginger, but it is so hit or miss. The girl scout cookie (pn free facility) with dairy in it didn't work, yet the these did.

Sometimes I wonder how much of it is psychological too.....


Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 04:03:53 PM
GingerPye
Moderator
Posted: 02.26.2010 at 09:13:04



wow, that is amazing. Hope things continue to be so positive!



DD, 15 - MA/EA/PA/env./eczema
DS, 12 - MA/EA/PA/env./asthma
DH - adult-onset asthma
me - env. allergies, exhaustion, & mental collapse
Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 03:57:58 PM
Posted: 02.26.2010 at 09:08:00



Thanks for the replies! I bought the nutri-grain bars. He hasn't touched them yet, but he ate at least 8 strawberry Newtons yesterday and some butter snap pretzels this morning.


Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 03:57:29 PM
my3guys
Member
Posted: 02.23.2010 at 02:04:03



Just check the Nutri-grain bars...some have more milk in them than others. Some have cheese flavors, we haven't tried those.



2 children with allergies covering milk, eggs, peanuts,treenuts, soy, oas, seasonal allergies

1 child with chronic reflux
Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 03:56:44 PM
Posted: 02.23.2010 at 01:29:42



Teddy Grahams don't have milk. Not even the choco chip ones.

Nutri-grain bars are a great idea, as are the fig newtons!


Posted by admin rebekahc
 - September 18, 2011, 03:56:14 PM
my3guys
Member
Posted: 02.23.2010 at 12:38:03



Here's what we've found so far (avoiding egg and soy protein)and coconut:

Original, Chocolate, Pretzel goldfish

Keebler Vanilla Wafers

There are other keebler cookies, but ds seemed to have a problem due to coconut possibly

Nabisco Gripz mini cookies

Nabisco Fig Newtons

Kellogg Nutri-Grain Bars (just started....ate 1/2 one and wasn't sure)

I'll think if we have more.

Oh, also some breads, which I can't think of the brand name...maybe Pepperidge Farm hot dog/hamburg rolls.

Edited: Changed the brand of nutri-grain bars


« Last Edited by my3guys 02.23.2010 at 02:27:49 »



2 children with allergies covering milk, eggs, peanuts,treenuts, soy, oas, seasonal allergies

1 child with chronic reflux