People with serious food allergies want impostors to stop faking it in restaurants

Authored by cbc.ca and submitted by stanxv
image for People with serious food allergies want impostors to stop faking it in restaurants

Sara Elliott has had it with people faking food allergies in restaurants. She has life-threatening allergies to eggs, dairy and nuts and fears the impostors are hurting her chances of safely dining out.

"It teaches the waiter to not take it seriously," says Elliott, who lives in Windsor, Ont. "It's selfish and kind of rude. It's also dangerous and irresponsible."

Some restaurant-goers are tempted to invent allergies to get a dish their way — often motivated by a much less serious food sensitivity or the growing number of fad diets like the gluten-free craze. They may see their lie as a harmless fib, but others worry it could lead to restaurants becoming numb to all allergy claims.

"Faux food allergies are all the rage," griped California chef David Mau in a recent column. "People covet and collect theirs like Gucci handbags."

And the consequences? "It's like pulling that fire alarm handle in junior high all the time. At some point, everyone is just gonna stop paying attention," he wrote.

Could fake food allergies inspire wait staff to take all allergy claims less seriously? (Dylan+Jeni/Terroni)

Elliott believes the fakers may already be sullying her restaurant experience. She barely dines out now because of a recent string of serious reactions when eating supposedly safe restaurant dishes.

She says one time she wound up in the emergency room and was sick for two days. Although she had clearly stated her allergies, someone still had put butter in her mashed potatoes.

"I got about halfway through it and started with the cramps," she recalls. "I was like basically collapsed in the bathroom."

Elliott wonders if some restaurants aren't taking her allergies seriously.

"Are they just thinking I'm another one of these people who just basically has a frivolous request?"

So how could fakers muddle the message about the severity of food allergies? Apparently, it can involve what they actually wind up eating.

Elliott says she has twice dined out with people who feigned food allergies and then ate food that should have made them sick — in front of bewildered servers. In one incident, a friend complained about a dessert containing bananas.

"She makes a huge production about how she's allergic to bananas, but then she eats it," Elliott said.

Hannah Lank was surprised and upset when her friend faked a food allergy at a restaurant to avoid eating gluten. (Hannah Lank)

She has a life-threatening allergy to peanuts and tree nuts. So she was both surprised and upset when earlier this year her friend — who was on a new diet — faked a gluten allergy when they were out for brunch.

"She made a big deal about ordering a dish that would be safe for her to eat with her made-up food allergy," says Lank, a student at the University of Toronto.

The friend then decided she didn't like her options and ordered a dish containing gluten anyway, confusing the waitress.

"It's definitely not good for educating the public about how serious food allergies are," says Lank.

Restaurant general manager Anna Mammoliti says she's well aware some customers fake it.

"I've had people claim they're allergic to gluten and then you walk by the table and they're eating a piece of pizza from the person they were sitting next to," says Mammoliti, with Terroni restaurants, located in Toronto and L.A.

She says she can see how made-up claims could lead to restaurants becoming less sensitive to the issue. But she adds that Terroni takes every single allergy claim seriously — and with good reason.

"I don't want to be calling an ambulance," says Mammoliti.

So what's inspiring people to fake food allergies? Some may be getting the idea from diet advice that promotes it as a witty trick.

A website touting the Paleo diet — one free of processed foods — recommends people tell servers they have a gluten allergy. "Restaurants are very keen to avoid making anyone sick and becoming liable for it," the site states.

The website of the TV show The Doctors explains that restaurants typically add lots of butter to vegetables. "Avoid this fat trap by telling a little white lie in the name of health: 'I'm allergic to butter!'"

Terroni Restaurants in Toronto says it takes every single food allergy seriously. (Dylan+Jeni/Terroni)

Besides sending the wrong message to restaurant staff, Elliott has another concern about the faking trend: that overwhelmed restaurants will simply turn allergy sufferers away.

"The chef's going to get pretty pissed off," she says. "I've had it where I'll go and the chef says they're not willing to cook for me."

Terroni restaurants have a strict protocol for accommodating people with food allergies that includes servers informing the manager and sending an allergy alert to the kitchen along with the order.

Mammoliti says dealing with food allergies slows down the kitchen, and that those faking it need to understand the unnecessary stress they're putting on staff.

"Stop doing it," she says. "You are taking up the time that we need for customers who have serious allergies."

As for Elliott, she wants the impostors to know the price she pays for being afraid to dine in restaurants.

"You're missing out on birthdays and anniversaries and reunions, and you're just feeling like you can't be a part of society," she says. "But at the same time, you don't want to die."

tunzaroo on May 29th, 2017 at 01:34 UTC »

Unfortunately, there's a lot of truth in this.

With "gluten free" being the new diet fad, more restaurants are offering 'gluten free' dishes that aren't actually allergy safe. My fiance has celiacs. It's not a 'oh I don't eat bread' kind of thing. It's a 'if I eat a burger cooked on the same grill as a bun was toasted, I will be violently vomiting and shitting for hours afterwards, and for a week after my joints will ache and I will feel like I have the flu".

Since the gluten free diet fad has come about, he's had far more issues with contamination at restaurants. Before, if we said "hey, sorry to be a huge pain, but he has a severe allergy, so can you just bring us a burger with no bun and no fries? A bed of lettuce would be great!" they would bring a burger on lettuce, and would cook it in a way where there was no contamination. Now, we get a burger cooked on the same surface as buns are toasted, and we get salad with the croutons picked off. And he gets really really sick.

So we just don't go out to eat anymore.

existentialblu on May 29th, 2017 at 00:24 UTC »

As the proud owner of a nasty shrimp allergy, I try my damnedest not to be a dick to restaurant employees and advocate for myself. I won't demand new oil in the frier. I will ask about shared surfaces and will specifically order things that are easily accommodated. If a restaurant has a shrimp on its logo I don't expect them to turn everything upside down for me. If waitstaff seems dismissive about my concerns, I will leave.

Part of this is that I'm utterly paranoid in avoiding these triggers because ambulances and epipens are unpleasant and damned expensive.

People who fake allergies piss me the hell off. They put those who are actually affected in danger so that they can feel special. Having to be bloody careful all the time is a pain in the ass, and I miss the time before my allergy showed up, as it's a sort of special that I really would rather not be.

Edit: I will ask about the fryer and understand that getting an oil change ain't gonna happen.

rwesterman4 on May 28th, 2017 at 23:36 UTC »

Seriously people, we wont get pissed if you just politely say "I don't like tomatoes can you please leave them off?" I used to work in a hospital and we would get serious allergies, but i will never forget the lady allergic to ahi tuna specifically. Trout and regular tunas were both fine and we didnt carry ahi tuna anyways.