Anonymous wrote:So just serve Mexican or Chinese food which is usually gluten free (minus the flour tortillas, but you can use corn tortillas).
Anonymous wrote:GF is really easy for snacks. Most potato and tortilla chips are gf. All crudite are. Cheese, hummus, guacamole, salsa all should be. Vast majority of charcuterie items are.
We are trying to be lower carb and I prefer slices of cucumbers to crackers for many cheeses/spreads and carrots are fantastic with spicy guac.
I think OP is being a little mean and special.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No- the celiac member can bring their own food. That's what the ones I know do, because they don't possibly trust some or "all" food being gluten free. It's way to risky for them.
This is absurd. GF food is not that hard. They should not have to "bring their own food" unless they prefer that. There should be sufficient GF options, but no, all options need not be GF.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly as a celiac I would appreciate the thought but probably wouldn’t eat the offered snacks. There’s such a high chance of cross contamination in someone else’s kitchen no matter how well intentioned someone is.
Anonymous wrote:In principle, I agree with OP. This is an adult, it doesn’t sound like a severe allergy, it’s just snacks, not a meal, and it’s infrequent. If there’s one option for the GF person and everything brought to her home is GF, there should be no issue. It would be like if someone is pregnant and not having wine. Everyone else can still have wine, and the pregnant person can have lemonade.
That said, if lots of other loud voices insist all snacks must all be GF for all monthly meetings, I would just go along with it, even though I agree this is unnecessary. There are a bazillion things that are naturally GF that other posters mentioned. No need to buy special GF bread or other frankenfoods. It’s just snacks, not even a meal. Honestly I don’t even know why adults need snacks in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s once a month. Can’t you deal with once a month gluten free food? I agree to go with natural gluten free food or the tried and true one you like.
But then, if another person is vegan, one is allergic to soy, one to nuts, etc,this approach leads to all snacks having to meet all the requirements. Makes much more sense to just make sure there is at least one option for the GF person and at least one option for anyone else with a restriction. The exception would be if someone were deathly allergic and couldn't even breathe the same air as the allergen.