Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Near miss: went out for dinner with my boyfriend and a couple he knew. The woman ordered a seafood soup. Next day we heard she got so violently sick she had been admitted to the hospital.
Never order seafood soup unless it’s a purpose made soup like clam chowder
“It’s not old fish, it’s a whole new thing”
https://www.eater.com/2016/1/13/10759544/anthony-bourdain-the-big-short-film
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) Crab ravioli. This was the worst. I could barely function for 24 hours after the onset (4-5 hours after eating). Spend most of the time in the bathroom, sometimes puking and pooping simultaneously. 2) Crabs. Puked at the restaurant. No one else got sick, so I assume I just got a really bad one. 3) Indian food. Haven’t touched it since. Had to crawl back and wake my husband up and let him know that he couldn’t go to work the next day (SAHM with an infant). 4) Crab legs on a Sunday. Never buy seafood on a Sunday!
You have a theme going on here. 3 of your 4 examples are crab. Have you considered that it might be an allergy instead of food poisoning?
Crab cakes made me sick once too. I’m definitely not allergic.
I am guessing Listeria.Anonymous wrote:Got sick from HH snacks with DH a few years back. We spent the next day vomiting while our poor two year old destroyed the house. That was the last time. Never going back to that place even though they’ve since turned over the restaurant.
Anonymous wrote:The rice is actually the most likely culprit, not the fish. It’s one of the most common sources of food poisoning, and is generally easily characterized by the quick and severe onset like you experienced.
I would certainly advise your local health authority, as it may mean the place isn’t storing properly, especially if they are less busy with COVID.
start hydrating as much as you can - slow sips of cool or room temperature water or electrolyte solution (you can dilute Gatorade if you have it, but it has a lot of fructose and that can cause further misery in some people).
Watch your symptoms, and go get looked at further if you develop bloody diarrhea, dehydration, fever or muscle cramps, or are unable to even keep sips down.
Anonymous wrote:A relative got salmonella. After extensive interviews with Heath Delartment and testing, they determined the most likely culprit was sprouts from a high end sandwich shop in Manhattan. The health department peoole said sprouts are one of the most common causes. Relative was hospitalized for weeks and at least partially disabled for a year due to after-effects. Relative saw many specialists and finally was able to control the lingering symptoms by totally reworking her diet — the salmonella basically destroyed her gut and all sort of foods she had previously been fine with gave her really debilitating symptoms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ten years ago, had a steak from outback.brought my dog home the bone and leftovers. Hours later, wake up to the dog crapping uncontrollably and then I started soon after. Cleaning up dog diarrhea while also shitting and puking your brains out is not the best. Good luck, OP
I got food poisoning from Outback, too! I had chicken. I woke up from a dead sleep and forcefully vomited all over. Then for the rest of the day. It was very violent, not like other stomach bugs I’ve had.
Anonymous wrote:Vietnam street food. A year of diarrhea, dehydration, meds and hospitals to get rid of a parasitic infection. Zero stars, do not recommend.
Anonymous wrote:Near miss: went out for dinner with my boyfriend and a couple he knew. The woman ordered a seafood soup. Next day we heard she got so violently sick she had been admitted to the hospital.