• Menu
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Before Header

Michelle's blog

Food allergy and food intolerance, freefrom foods, electrosensitivity, this and that...

  • Home
  • Blog
  • About
  • FreeFrom Food Awards
  • Foods Matter
  • Walks & Gardens
  • Salon Music
  • Home
  • Blog
  • About
  • FreeFrom Food Awards
  • Foods Matter
  • Walks & Gardens
  • Salon Music

The challenges of freefrom catering

27/04/2013 //  by Michelle Berridale Johnson//  Leave a Comment

Ali Gees Safe Food All those restaurants who are already seriously nervous about the new 2014 allergy declarations will have been sent into a blue funk by the fate of Jamie’s Italian in Portsmouth. They have just pleaded guilty to ‘selling food not of the nature and quality demanded by the purchaser’ after they failed to serve a coeliac customer the gluten-free food that she had asked for three times. The coeliac in question has already been awarded £2,500 in a civil case.

The Jamie’s case, of course, has nothing to do with the new regulations. Their coeliac customer used the quite comprehensive provisions of the Food Safety Act, the Food Safety Regulations and the Consumer Protection Act to bring her case. However, she was on strong ground as she had  asked for gluten-free food no less than three times and still not got it, so the restaurant did not really have a leg to stand on. But, when the new regulations come in next year, although they are still pretty vague – the restaurant only has to ‘provide the information’ although in what form is not specified – the onus for informing the customer will have shifted to the establishment. (For a more detailed assessment of the proposed regulations see my blog last August.)

This has already reduced many catering establishments, especially those who know little about allergy so really have no idea what they are getting into, to gibbering wrecks. Catering consultants,  laboratories and groups such as Coeliac UK and the Anaphylaxis Campaign are all rushing around setting up guidelines and courses by the truckload. Indeed, we are at it ourselves and are discussing with the Food and Drink Innovation Network the possibility of adding a second ‘catering’ day to our annual ‘freefrom’ industry seminar in September.

But although, obviously, the ‘freefrom’ food that is going to be served and the contamination controls that are established in the kitchens are hugely important, the most crucial area it seems to me is the level of allergy awareness and the quality of the information that is provided by the front of house staff. No matter how wonderful your gluten or dairy free dishes or how conscientious your contamination control, if the front of house staff do not understand the requirements of your food sensitive customers and cannot give them the correct information, then you might as well not bother.

It was very much this aspect of ‘freefrom’ catering that we had in mind when  we announced, at the FreeFrom Food Awards presentation two weeks ago, that we were looking at the possibility of launching a FreeFrom Restaurant Award for 2014. In the spirit of the awards, for which entrants’ products must be available by some means or other nationwide – and also because there is no other way that we could practically run it – entry would be restricted to chains with a minimum of, say, 20 outlets around the country. More to the point, judging would place heavy emphasis on allergen awareness and the provision of allergen information. Anyhow, early stages as yet, but, watch this space…. And listen up, all you restaurant chains out there!

Allergy Catering ManualAnd, of course – how could I forget?…. Because I have a horrible habit of being at least five years ahead of every game (who else would have tried to sell organic, ‘freefrom’ food into the supermarkets ten years before anyone had invented the term ‘freefrom’?….) – if you want a quick primer on how to deal with allergy in food service, all you need to do is to buy a copy of our excellent Allergy Catering Manual.

Published way back in 2005, it ‘takes you, step by step, through food allergy: what it is; how people react; the foods that cause reactions; how to deal with those reactions and prepare food that allergic customers will be able to eat; how to train your staff; where to buy ingredients and – most important – your legal position.’

 

Category: Coeliac/celiac disease, Dairy-free, Food, FreeFrom Food, Gluten-freeTag: Allergy Catering Manual, allergy regulations for food service, Allergy regulations for food sold loose, anaphylaxis, Anaphylaxis Campaign, Coeliac UK, Consumer Protection Act, contamination control, FDIN, Food and Drink Innovation Network, Food Safety Act, Food Safety Regulations, FreeFrom Food Awards, freefrom food in food service, FreeFrom Restaurant Award, Jamie's Italian

Previous Post: « Measles and MMR – again…
Next Post: Another peanut storm… »

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Colliding with a new reality – the hazards of low vision
  • Call for adult allergy sufferers
  • The vegan/allergy labelling issue
  • A gluten free Christmas just could be delicious – not a penance!
  • A food fad won’t kill you – an allergy will

Search this blog

ARCHIVES

Blogroll

  • Allergy Insight
  • Better brains, naturally
  • For Ever FreeFrom
  • Free From (gluten)
  • Freefrom Food Awards
  • Gluten-free Mrs D
  • Natural Health Worldwide
  • Pure Health Clinic
  • Skins Matter
  • The Helminthic Therapy Wiki
  • Truly Gluten Free
  • What Allergy?

TOPICS

A food fad won’t kill you – an allergy will

There has been a predictable outcry in the allergy world this week’s in response to Rachel Johnson’s piece in Thursday’s Evening Standard on ‘dietary requirements’ and food fads. Being charitable, I am assuming that she has never suffered from or lived with someone with a food allergy. However, I do have some sympathy with her …

Bioplastics – a solution or part of the problem?

Everyday Plastic is a social enterprise group using accessible learning and publicity campaigns to reduce the amount of plastics used daily in our society. It was founded by its current director Daniel Webb who, having moved to Margate in Kent in 2016, was horrified to discover that there were no plastic recycling options on offer.  …

FreeFrom Christmas Awards – the Winners

Since they were launched two years ago the FreeFrom Christmas Awards have been a great success. And how lucky are ‘freefrom-ers’ these days!  From Advent calendars to gifts, party food to Christmas dinner, there is no longer any need for them to miss out. Indeed, the whole family can happily eat freefrom and never know …

Do not extradite Julian Assange to the US

Julian Assange is being sought by the current US administration for publishing US government documents which exposed war crimes and human rights abuses. The politically motivated charges represent an unprecedented attack on press freedom and the public’s right to know – seeking to criminalise basic journalistic activity. Assange is facing a 175-year sentence for publishing …

What to believe – applying critical thought

For the average citizen evaluating the claims made for cure all – or even improve all – health products and procedures has always been difficult. Not only is it an area in which we have minimal expertise but most of us have a vested interest in finding a miracle intervention that will solve our health …

Could wireless monitoring devices be killing racehorses?

Regular readers may remember that back in August last year I alerted you to a posting on Arthur Firstenberg’s Cellphone Task Force site about phone masts and bird flu. Could there be a connection between the fact that the two wildlife sites in Holland and Northern France which had suffered catastrophic bird flu deaths were …

Site Footer

Copyright © 2026 · Michelle's Blog · Michelle Berridale Johnson · Site design by DigitalJen·