Quote from: YouKnowWho on October 05, 2012, 09:06:12 AMQuote from: twinturbo on October 04, 2012, 04:19:53 PM
Not disagreeing with the answers above but what I meant was entirely something different where the situation calls for making a hard decision between opposing allergen interests. Ideally I could avoid shared lines with all the kids known allergens but I have to pick products on a very case by case basis. There's just too many allegens for me to write off even shared lines for every product I buy. As is the case for which allergens we buy, serve, eat and how we eat it at home.
While I can make most meals safe for all people between all we have a long list of allergens and intolerences. I cannot do shared lines with wheat, barley or oats for DS1 (oats are usually wheat contaminated and oddly enough, a common issue) unless it comes from just a few companies who clean and test appropriately. I am looser on eggs in regards to shared as long as they are cooked egg as opposed to raw (ie salad dressings are an issue whereas Kinninnick baked products are not).
I am lax with DS2 in regards to shared or may contains for tree nuts. He does not react to tree nuts, only peanuts. And I feel the risk is small enough for the minute tree nut to be contaminated with peanuts. I am not lax (to the best of my knowledge) in regards to shared peanut lines. Shared facilities I am okay with. Though it has been pointed out that I have missed products with shared lines either due to old information or misinformation.
We do have both kids allergens in the house and products are well labeled for each child and adult LOL But yes, I understand your reasoning on having to go down the line and figure out the lesser of the evils. It's like voting
Quote from: twinturbo on October 04, 2012, 04:19:53 PM
Not disagreeing with the answers above but what I meant was entirely something different where the situation calls for making a hard decision between opposing allergen interests. Ideally I could avoid shared lines with all the kids known allergens but I have to pick products on a very case by case basis. There's just too many allegens for me to write off even shared lines for every product I buy. As is the case for which allergens we buy, serve, eat and how we eat it at home.
Quote from: Ra3chel on October 04, 2012, 01:22:13 PMQuote from: twinturbo on October 03, 2012, 02:15:58 PM
There's no way to explain how you have to trade off risks between so many allergens. After getting FA sandbagged midway seemingly casual conversations I now never assume any conversation will be innocent even with good friends or family.
I've explained it successfully as an issue of degrees of separation relative to level of risk. I'm comfortable with two degrees of separation: for instance, I wouldn't eat a may-contain, but I'm comfortable kissing M after he has (obviously not the issue here!), or with someone else eating it in my kitchen.
Quote from: twinturbo on October 04, 2012, 04:19:53 PM
Not disagreeing with the answers above but what I meant was entirely something different where the situation calls for making a hard decision between opposing allergen interests. Ideally I could avoid shared lines with all the kids known allergens but I have to pick products on a very case by case basis. There's just too many allegens for me to write off even shared lines for every product I buy. As is the case for which allergens we buy, serve, eat and how we eat it at home.
Quote from: Ra3chel on October 04, 2012, 01:22:13 PMQuote from: twinturbo on October 03, 2012, 02:15:58 PM
There's no way to explain how you have to trade off risks between so many allergens. After getting FA sandbagged midway seemingly casual conversations I now never assume any conversation will be innocent even with good friends or family.
I've explained it successfully as an issue of degrees of separation relative to level of risk. I'm comfortable with two degrees of separation: for instance, I wouldn't eat a may-contain, but I'm comfortable kissing M after he has (obviously not the issue here!), or with someone else eating it in my kitchen.
Quote from: twinturbo on October 03, 2012, 02:15:58 PM
There's no way to explain how you have to trade off risks between so many allergens. After getting FA sandbagged midway seemingly casual conversations I now never assume any conversation will be innocent even with good friends or family.