Histamine Intolerance: The Cookbook
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About this ebook
This cookbook includes 95 mouth-watering, easy-to-follow, low-histamine recipes for soup, pasta, fish, meat, vegetables, desserts and cakes. It also provides a simple explanation for how histamine works, together with a comprehensive table of foods that are safe, and those to avoid.
Although histamine is an essential chemical needed for many important functions in your body, it is possible to have too much of it. Excess histamine can cause unpleasant symptoms, often misdiagnosed as allergic reactions. You can do nothing about the amount of histamine your body makes, but the good news is that adjusting your diet is often enough to bring your symptoms under control.
Dr Janice Joneja, who wrote the foreword to this book, explains the mechanisms of histamine intolerance in her books, Histamine Intolerance: The Essential Guide, and Histamine Intolerance: The Comprehensive Guide for Healthcare Professionals.
In this companion recipe book, Michelle Berriedale-Johnson — who is director of the Free From Food Awards, editor of the popular website Foods Matter, and author of over a dozen books of delicious recipes for people on restricted diets — has created almost 100 exciting and simple-to-make low histamine recipes. Using her suggestions, following a low-histamine diet becomes a positive pleasure!
Michelle Berriedale-Johnson
Michelle Berriedale-Johnson studied history at Trinity College, Dublin before starting her own catering business specialising in historic feasts. She is the author of a number of food history titles. In the late 1980s, she became involved with food allergy and nutrition, and she has worked as a writer, publisher and a food consultant, devising therapeutically, nutritionally and gastronomically acceptable dairy, gluten and egg free dishes both for individuals and for commercial production.
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Book preview
Histamine Intolerance - Michelle Berriedale-Johnson
HISTAMINE INTOLERANCE
The Cookbook
By
Michelle Berriedale-Johnson
With Foreword By
Dr. Janice Joneja
Table of Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Ingredients and Measurements
Low and High Histamine Foods
SOUPS
PASTA
FISH
MEAT, POULTRY AND GAME
VEGETABLES AND VEGETARIAN DISHES
Rice and Quinoa
Vegetable Based
Salads
Pulses
DESSERTS
BAKING
Foreword
Histamine is an essential chemical that is required for a number of extremely important processes in our brain, our digestive tract, our nervous system and our immune system. Our body makes histamine, but we also consume it in medicines, in drinks and in foods.
Normally, our own inbuilt processing systems (enzymes such as diamine oxidase [DAO]) will break down any extra histamine that we produce. But, on occasion, for all kinds of reasons, we create more histamine than our system can process. This can result in unpleasant allergy-like symptoms.
When this happens, to get rid of the symptoms, we need to reduce the overall amount of histamine in our body. The easiest way to do this is to reduce the amount of histamine that we eat and drink by following a low histamine diet.
I explain about the diet and which foods affect histamine levels in my books, Histamine Intolerance: The Essential Guide and Histamine Intolerance: The Comprehensive Guide for Healthcare Professionals. It is one thing knowing which foods to avoid and another, finding recipes that make tasty and nutritious low histamine dishes! So that is what this book is all about.
Michelle has been creating delicious recipes for restricted diets for many years – see her large collection of gluten, dairy and nut free, and low sugar cook books, or the hundreds of recipes on her FoodsMatter.com website. She has now focused her skills on creating 95 low histamine recipes for soups, pasta dishes, fish, meat, vegetables and desserts – while also providing a simple explanation of how histamine works and a comprehensive table of foods that are safe and those to avoid. I hope you enjoy eating them.
Dr. Janice Joneja – May 2019
Introduction
This recipe book is designed to be used in conjunction with Dr. Janice Joneja’s Histamine Intolerance: The Essential Guide and her Histamine Intolerance: The Comprehensive Guide for Healthcare Professionals. As she explains in both guides, people experiencing the symptoms of histamine intolerance are not intolerant of histamine as such but have excess histamine in their body. ‘Histamine’ as she says, ‘is an important chemical that is needed for the efficient functioning of many body systems – and is a crucial tool of the immune system for fighting foreign invaders in the body – like bacteria, toxins and allergens.’ So, we absolutely need histamine, we just don’t need too much of it.
The body itself produces much of the histamine that it uses, but we also consume histamine in the food and drinks that we eat. Some medications can also increase the level of histamine in the body.
Any excess histamine we produce is normally broken down by the enzymes diamine oxidase (DAO) and histamine N-methyl transferase (HNMT). But sometimes we end up with more histamine than these enzymes can break down. This results in histamine excess which can cause allergy-like symptoms such as:
Itching
Flushing
Hives
Blocked or runny nose
Digestive problems
Increased pulse rate
Drop in blood pressure
Chest pain
Headache
Panic attacks
While all of these symptoms are distressing, it should be emphasized that none of them are life threatening as an allergic reaction might be, and, that they will subside if the total level of histamine in the body drops.
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How to manage histamine intolerance
As Dr. Joneja explains it, we need to think of the histamine in our body in the context of a bucket of water. As long as the bucket is not overfull, everything is fine; pour in more water than the bucket can hold, and it overflows.
As long as we do not make or consume more histamine than our histamine bucket can hold (and our enzymes can process) all is fine. But if we consume or make more than our bucket can hold (and our enzymes process) the bucket will overflow, and we will suffer symptoms.
The problem is that we cannot control a lot of our histamine production. For example, when our immune system is triggered the first thing that it does is to release histamine to protect us against the invader – we cannot control that process.* Histamine production can also be triggered by changes in hormone levels, and by certain medical conditions including mast cell activation disorders (MCAD) such as Mastocytosis.
Some medicines and medical agents also either release histamine or inhibit the effective working of the enzyme DAO** that processes it.
* Antihistamine medication may temporarily block the action of histamine but will do nothing to reduce the amount of histamine in circulation so as soon as you stop taking the medication, symptoms are likely return.
** It is possible to take DAO supplements which may help to process excess histamine in the digestive tract, but it will not help to reduce the amount of histamine within the body.
For more on both antihistamines and DAO supplements, see Histamine Intolerance: The Essential Guide and, for more detailed information, Histamine Intolerance: The Comprehensive Guide for Healthcare Professionals – both by Dr. Janice Joneja.
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The low histamine diet
However, the one thing that we can control is how much histamine we consume. We do this by avoiding eating foods that are high in histamine, and those that release histamine when they enter the body.
But, when looking at high/low histamine foods, we need to keep Dr. Joneja’s bucket analogy in mind. While avoiding specific foods that are high in histamine is helpful, it is the total amount of histamine that we consume that is important. Individual foods alone will not trigger symptoms, it is the total amount of histamine in our bucket that will cause it to overflow. Sometimes it takes several minutes and up to a few hours after eating high-histamine food before the histamine level reaches the top of the bucket.
NB: It is very likely that, if you are suffering from a histamine excess, and if you do manage to reduce the histamine in your system by eating a low histamine diet, your symptoms will subside. However, if, after two weeks on the diet they do not, then you should assume that your issue is not excess dietary histamine, return to a normal diet and go back to your physician for further investigation.
High and low histamine foods – the lists
While there are certain foods that are widely accepted as being high in histamine: fermented foods, for example, pickled foods, foods high in preservatives such as sulfites or benzoates and alcohol, and certain foods that are accepted as being low in histamine: most fresh meat, most fresh vegetables, most grains and many fruits, there are a number foods on which experts do not agree.
The picture is also complicated by the fact that each histamine intolerance sufferer will react in an individual way. Variables such as a person’s production of DAO, allergies in certain seasons, hormonal fluctuations, and presence of inflammatory conditions will affect the amount of histamine in their bucket. This means that each histamine sensitive person may need to refine their own low histamine diet with a certain amount of trial and error.
In the table below, we have combined the lists provided by Dr. Joneja and those from the Swiss Interest Group Histamine Intolerance (SIGHI) - a website run by those suffering with histamine intolerance - to give a clear indication of foods that are generally accepted by all to be both high in histamine or low in histamine.
We have also added a third ‘middle’ column where there is not enough evidence to really set a level. We suggest that you initially avoid foods in this middle column, but once you have got your intolerance under control then experiment with some of these ‘middle’ foods, as they may well not add enough to the bucket level to provoke symptoms.
The recipes
The recipes in this book exclude all high histamine ingredients but may include some which appear in the ‘middle’ list. If they do, they will only be in relatively small quantities.
While all the recipes are low in histamine, they are certainly not exclusively designed for those on low histamine diets and can be eaten and enjoyed by anyone.
All the recipes are designed to inspire you, not to be prescriptive. So please feel free to use them as a basis for experimentation.
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Gluten and Dairy
Although fresh dairy products and unprocessed gluten-containing flours and grains are low in histamine, we are aware that some readers may