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Recovery from Soy Part I: A Strategy for Dealing with Soy Allergies PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 14 February 2008 21:28

soy-iconNOTE: This is the first in a series of articles about recovering from soy. For answers to frequently asked questions, visit Dr. Daniel's website www.wholesoystory.com as well as our Soy FAQ page. Dr. Daniel offers private coaching, nutritional counseling and small, evening and weekend teleseminar classes on soy recovery and other health issues. For further information, call Dr. Daniel at 505-266-3252 or email her at wholenutritionist (at) earthlink.net.


Hidden soy exists in thousands of everyday foods and cosmetics as well as products such as cardboards, paints, cars, biodiesel fuels, fabric softeners, mattresses and even books printed with soy ink. This is a nightmare for people who are allergic to soy and a challenge for those who are sensitive to it or who just want to avoid it. When New Trends printed The Whole Soy Story: the Dark Side of America's Favorite Health Food in 2005, we went "green" and boasted on the copyright page "Printed with soy ink, an appropriate use of soy." Soon after, we learned, to our dismay, that people who are highly allergic to soy cannot read the book!

Warning Labels

Books printed with soy ink don't yet require warning labels but luckily foods now do. In January 2006, help for consumers came with the Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act. The law requires food manufacturers to clearly state whether a product contains any of the top eight allergens—milk, eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, fish, shellfish, wheat and soy protein—and to put the warning in plain English. That means companies have to spell it out S-O-Y and not hide behind confusing and little-understood terms like "hydrolyzed plant protein" or "textured vegetable protein."

That's good enough for people who simply prefer to avoid soy. For highly allergic people, the new labeling law is not enough. Soy oil, lecithin and vitamin E (often added as a preservative) do not fall under the labeling requirement. (The FDA reasons that such products are free of soy protein, which is only true when they are manufactured under perfect conditions.) Animal products too may unexpectedly contain "hidden" soy. Some will appear on labels such as "extenders" added to ground meat, "plasticizers" used to hold patties, meat balls and hot dogs together or soy oil pumped into pre-basted turkeys. But labeling won't help the increasing numbers of people who are starting to react to the flesh of fish, poultry, lamb or cattle that were fattened on soy feed and to eggs laid by soy fed chickens.

Inaccurate labeling is yet another problem. Both the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and Canadian Food Inspection Agency recall hundreds of products each year, usually because of undeclared allergens. Three factors are usually to blame: omissions or errors on labels, cross contamination of manufacturing equipment and mistakes made by suppliers of ingredients. With the new labeling law, some health food store companies have voluntarily taken the precaution of stating clearly on their labels whether a food product was produced in a "facility that also processes soy." Likewise, some supplement companies may indicate that a probiotic was grown on a culture containing dairy and soy, even though soy is not officially an ingredient and is extremely unlikely to appear in the final product. Such companies, however, are the exception and not the rule.

Nothing to Eat

Since The Whole Soy Story came out, hundreds of allergic people have told me that they live lives of angry desperation. Trips to the supermarket or health food store mean hours of poring over food labels and finding little or nothing to eat. Making matters worse, many react to soy dust in the bulk bins and/or smells in the cleaning product and cosmetic aisles. Some of these people use up tremendous amounts of energy venting in letters to the FDA and to food manufacturers. Their entire lives revolve around fear of soy and the frustration of trying to completely avoid it. What they want is for the government to outlaw soy entirely, so they can be happy again.

Why Avoidance Isn't Enough

The mistake most of these highly allergic people make is to put all their energy into avoiding soy. Vigilance is essential, of course, especially for those who might go into anaphylactic shock. But the downside is an increasingly limited diet that can precipitate additional food allergies. Think how many of the soy allergies develop in the first place. A baby, child or adult reacts to commercial dairy products only to be switched to soy infant formula or soy milk. Or, parents of an autistic child will go on a gluten-free and casein-free diet and end up using soy flours, soy protein and soy milk. The overuse of soy then leads to soy-related digestive disorders, allergies, thyroid damage and other health problems. Every week I get letters from people wanting "protein powders," "energy bars" and other convenience foods free of whey and soy protein. The food industry's latest answer is pea protein, but people who take pea protein every day will likely develop allergies or sensitivities to it as well. In any case, 100 percent soy avoidance is well nigh impossible.

A better solution is to reduce—or even eliminate—the sensitivity and reactivity. This is not always easy, but is possible using the combination of right diet and high-quality soy-free supplements. To get started, here are four tips.

Tip # 1: If It Has A Label, Don't Buy It!

Live by this rule and you'll eliminate the frustration of poring over food labels at supermarkets. Basing their diet on readymade food products without any soy or other bad ingredients is the reason people with allergies think there's nothing they can eat. With the time saved, put your energy into preparing real foods, whole foods and slow foods. Eat a variety of them. This is the best way to avoid soy and will give your body the nourishment it needs for soy recovery.

Tip #2: Bone Up

People with allergies and food sensitivities almost always suffer from impaired digestion and a "leaky gut." Heal both with homemade bone broths rich in gelatin, cartilage and collagen. (Canned, packaged, restaurant or deli soups won't do the trick as they are almost never made properly.) Directions can be found in Nourishing Traditions and Eat Fat/Lose Fat. Both books contain broth-based recipes but feel free to use any of your old favorite soup or stew recipes after including the three key ingredients of bones, water and vinegar. Chicken, turkey, lamb, beef and fish broths are all good. In addition to making homemade soups and stews, use bone broth as the liquid when cooking rice and other grains to improve nutritional content and digestibility. Bone broth provides good levels of absorbable calcium for people who cannot tolerate dairy, even raw dairy.

Tip #3: Support Yourself with Coconut

The number one question I hear from readers is, "I can't drink milk so what do you recommend instead of soy milk?" Most people choose rice milk, a beverage that is high in sugar and low in nutritional value. The best non-dairy, soy free alternative is a homemade coconut tonic made with coconut milk (full fat, not "lite"), water, dolomite, vanilla and a little maple syrup or stevia for a sweetener. Thanks to the dolomite, it's rich in calcium and magnesium (see recipe below). Use coconut oil liberally as well. Coconut supports the immune system, always a weakness in people with allergies.

Coconut Milk Tonic

1 can whole coconut milk 3/4 cup filtered water
1-2 tablespoons maple syrup 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 teaspoon KAL brand dolomite powder

Mix all ingredients and heat gently. Serve in a mug. Note: Coconut Milk Tonic contains the same calories, fat and calcium as whole milk. However, this recipe should not be used as a substitute for raw milk in our recipes for baby formula. The tonic is still missing many compounds and nutrients found in raw milk. However, Coconut Milk Tonic can be used as a substitute for milk in a diet containing a variety of whole foods.

Tip #4: Bring In the Wee Beasties

Improve your intestinal flora and fauna with unpasteurized cultured vegetables, kombucha and other fermented foods and beverages. The problem is that few people do it. Those who get past the taste often give up after experiencing uncomfortable detoxification reactions such as bowel upsets, headaches and flu symptoms. Such reactions can be minimized by going slowly but surely. In addition, I recommend working with a health professional who does laboratory testing and can recommend a high-quality probiotic, customized digestive and metabolic enzymes, and other gut-healing supplements. Enzymes are critical because allergy sufferers produce insufficient amounts of pancreatic enzymes needed for adequate digestion of protein, fats and carbohydrates. Enzymes are not only needed to break down the proteins that would otherwise incite allergic reactions, but also to block the allergic reactions themselves. Furthermore, enzymes boost immune system function by promoting the growth of healthy intestinal flora. While healing can sometimes be accomplished with diet alone, most people need time to implement a full-tilt Nourishing Traditions diet. The right combination of diet and supplements can greatly speed the way.

Super Soy Me!

Remember Super Size Me, the 2004 darkly hilarious, award-winning documentary? The film features 30 days in the life of Morgan Spurlock who risked life and love by eating breakfast, lunch and dinner at McDonalds. Human interest is provided by his vegan girlfriend who worries (appropriately) but implies (inappropriately) that Morgan's fast weight gain, fatigue, liver toxicity and loss of libido are due not only to sugar but to the evil meat patty with its saturated fat. Truth is the amount of saturated fat in the burgers is far exceeded by soy oil on the griddle and in the French fries. And the buns, shakes and condiments all contain soy protein. Indeed, the movie might have been called Super Soy Me!

 

This article appeared in Wise Traditions in Food, Farming and the Healing Arts, the quarterly magazine of the Weston A. Price Foundation, Spring 2007.

About the Author

[authorbio:daniel-kaayla]

Comments (8)Add Comment
re: Blood type diet
written by CR, Aug 15 2011
Dear Carol,
I have blood type A (although I'm AO, not AA) and allergic to all forms of soy in my diet, especially lecithin. I had a swollen tongue all the time and couldn't figure out why til I realized it was from soy and I felt so amazing and lost 20 pounds when I got off the soy. I stopped getting headaches and mood swings too. At first I couldn't eat much of anything I didn't make myself, so I ate a lot of *gasp* lean red meat rice and veggies, cheese, oatmeal and milk and have never felt healthier.
...
written by Carol Jackson, Feb 14 2011
In the book, Eat Right For Your Blood Type, it is recommended that people with Type A blood type eat soy. Has anyone had any experience that refutes this?
RE: Dolomite powder safety
written by D., Feb 10 2011
To Candy (the first post, way at the bottom of the page): If dolomite powder wasn't safe WAPF would not recommend it, you can be sure of that. Also, if it wasn't safe I'd be dead because I use it every day. Wonderful source of calcium and magnesium in proper ratios. I also use it to make homemade toothpaste / toothpowder because I have a denture, as well as real teeth. I use it on my whole mouth and my denture as well.
Rebellion against Monsanto and HR 2751
written by Stu Jamison, Feb 10 2011
We need to disobey Monsanto and H.R. 2751 or we are finished. We cannot obey such dangerous laws under any condition. We must pressure the government to roll back H.R. 2751 (formerly S. 510) and tell president Obama not to sign this into law. It was Nancy Pelosi who resurrected this bill/law from the carcass of the cash for clunkers bill just before she left. Please remember that we are American citizens, not slaves. GMO soy is a poison and must be stopped. It is being put into everything despite the government knowing fully that it's toxic to animals and humans.
...
written by Marne, Jan 05 2011
Yes, I have also wondered whether I'm getting my soy "secondhand" from what they feed the meat, poultry, and eggs I'm eating. Butchers and farmers may mention that they fatten up the livestock and poultry a month before it goes to market. In the case of beef, they may say that it's for the "marbling" that makes it taste better, but if you think about it, it seems that it's really just to put weight on, as it is paid for/bought by the pound, correct?
...
written by Marne, Jan 05 2011
I am suspecting that, because all of this genetically modified soy and corn is GM'd to be "RoundUp ready," i.e. when they spray the RoundUp/glyphosate, it kills everything but the crop, that there is RoundUp herbicide residue on all of it. One of my indicators is trees and vegetation, and how it is being affected everywhere that vehicles that use biofuels travel. We are seeing dead and dying vegetation in our alleys, where garbage trucks' fumes waft through between garages, along our streets where school buses go, in parking lots, at intersections where vehicles idle, etc. This, in my opinion, becomes part of a strategy to satisfy contract agreements to supply private incinerator "energy" companies, so that they don't have to pay the higher costs of natural gas or coal, but that is another matter.
I have had cancer, and one of the things I learned from the cancer experience is that, in some ways, it is a matter of how much you are "throwing" at your immune system vs. how much it can handle.
I basically trashed my thyroid by overdoing soy powder shakes with soy "milk" (I think it's funny when Lewis Black says that they can't call it soy "juice," or no one would drink it), and it seems that once you've developed a sensitivity to soy, it becomes your life challenge to avoid it in everything. I have topical sensitivity to soy ink, and feel woozy when I handle mail that has been printed with soy ink. The calendars are now printed with it, and I can tell most of the time when a book has been printed with it, as Dr. Daniel mentioned. I have even noticed that I can have heart palpitations from this.
So, we are eating it, breathing it, and touching it.
It is possible to help yourself by building up your immunity and avoiding it as much as possible.
If you have an awareness about it, at least you have that, and are way ahead of people who do not. Unfortunately, with all of these construction-related (and gas-powered chain saws), bus driver jobs that our young (mostly men) people are doing, exposure to herbicide residue in biofuels is probably causing them, at the very least, respiratory problems (how many people do you know that are using inhalers?), not to mention that this same stuff is possibly causing childhood autism (someone should/could do a study of autism in children that ride school buses that use biodiesel).
Yes, Monsanto has got to go--their herbicide is killing everything, and it's getting into all of our rivers, streams, and groundwater.
Sorry that this is so long, but many issues with this, and many of them are related.

Soy Sufferer
written by Jean, May 18 2010
I have been suffering for two years not knowing what was wrong. My skin was too dermagraphic to test...I even reacted to water. I had stomach upsets, low blood sugar, palpitations, dizziness, nausea, gum sores, rashes everywhere, chronic fatigue, bloody stools, and a Really Really bad day was when I felt like someone was standing on my chest and when I closed my eyes there were fourth of July lights going off in my head. I went for an endoscopy, colonoscopy, cat scan, multiple blood tests for lupus, H-Pylori, thyroid, auto immune problems, patch testing for allergens and rast testing and on and on. I saw four allergists, a nutritionist, a gastroenterologist, a rhuematologist, an endocronologist and finally a wholistic doctor - all of whom failed to help me in any way. They said I was the picture of health - they didn't know why I was down to 97 pounds, and they would all like me to take Lexapro. I've never needed any kind of drug for emotional reasons, and I wasn't starting now. So for months I suffered in silence. Recently, I decided to go back to the allergist to see if I was sufficiently calmed down to test, and I am. However, the results are not good. In addition to my normal allegies (dust mites, shellfish, nuts and cantalope, I am allegic to SOY. But that's not the end of it. I am also allergic to milk, eggs, chicken, beef, coconut and palm, melons, onion. I am really concerned because the milk tested negative on the skin and high on the Rast. The soy tested high on the skin and ZERO on the Rast. I am being tested now for cross allergens and for other foods that also tested negative that I have trouble eating. In short, I feel like my life is over. I'm starving, I'm afraid to eat, I'm having trouble with all cooking oils with the exception of pure olive oil. I found one makeup that I can tolerate, and I am making my own laundry detergent, fabric softener, dish detergent and lotion. I bake my own bread. I've read alot about GMOs/GE's. I think the soy problem is largely due in fact to this problem so I am also trying to avoid GMO's. I am also noticing now that I cannot tolerate corn (corn chips, corn oil, HFCS). What is happening to this country? These allergies have broken down my immune system. How do you come back to normal? Alot of questions are coming to my mind. For instance, am I truly allergic to milk, beef, eggs and chicken or am I reacting to the soy/corn GMO feed? Also with the allergen serum. Did they use pure unadulterated soy in the Rast test and a GMO soy for the skin prick test? All I know is that I am depressed beyond belief. This has changed my whole life. I'm AFRAID of everything and mostly afraid that I will never get well. I am open to anything that will help, and I have already written government officials regarding the poisoning of Americans. Half of the ingredients allowed in the USA are banned in other countries. The first step is to get rid of Monsanto! I just read that since the onset of GE soy, allergy to soy has gone up 50% both here and in the UK. I am open to any suggestions and would love to know if the anyone else has the soy/milk/beef/eggs/chicken syndrome.
Thanks for listening. Jean
dolomite powder
written by Candy, Apr 27 2010
Is this dolomite powder safe?

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Last Updated on Thursday, 15 September 2011 18:24