ifoodie needs our assistance

 
25-Jan-2008 by rcsbriskethouse

A good friend of mine and fellow ifoodie contacted me about a week or so ago and asked if i could help come up with some recipes for a no protein diet. his daughter has a rare affliction that does not permit her to have protein. in her case eating protein could possibly prove to be lethal, she's a sweet beautiful litlle girl and of course without hesitation i agreed to help assist him with creating this cookbook specialy made and designed for this type of disease.

there is no doubt that this is going to be a challenge and so i am reaching out to the ifood community to help assist us on this journey. it will still be a while before she can even eat solid food because of her age so we have plenty of time to come up with something. surely with all of the talent and brilliant minds on ifood we can make this cookbook a reality. if you would like further information. send me a private message and i'll fill you in as best as i can.

i am staying in contact with this friend of mine on a regular basis. your help is definately appreciated.

Thanks a million

Comments

The Tortilla Guy says :

Hey Bro I am happy to help out with this !!! Will work on this weekend !!! The Tortilla Guy
Posted on: 25 January 2008 - 12:44pm

rcsbriskethouse says :

thanks steve it's much appreciated my friend, i'm actually looking forward to this challenge. it will help me get those creative juices flowing :) RC's Brisket house and catering RC's Keepin it real
Posted on: 25 January 2008 - 12:48pm

Snigdha says :

I'll be happy to help too. Shall PM you.
Posted on: 25 January 2008 - 4:41pm

rcsbriskethouse says :

Great Snigdha thanks, make no mistake it will be a challenge considering that almost everything has protein. i know arugula has no protein but i'm not sure what other veggies don't. i'll be looking for your PM thanks again friend RC's Brisket house and catering RC's Keepin it real
Posted on: 25 January 2008 - 4:44pm

Snigdha says :

From what I have read, googled...I see that most/all food contains some amount of protein. However vegetable juice, starches such as bread, pasta are low-protein. Only traces of protein are found in fruits, fats and sugars. The following links may be helpful in finding low/no protein food http://www.gicare.com/pated/edtgs10.htm http://healthlibrary.epnet.com/GetContent.aspx?token=d1db22f9-c4e0-4d22-bfa3-887872398b64&chunkiid=197991 http://depts.washington.edu/pku/NewCurriculum/pdfs/general/TargetFoodList.pdf
Posted on: 27 January 2008 - 1:52am

shantihhh says :

I found there is a 19 y/o girl in Greece with this same disease. While searching I came up with this that might help, but wow everything has some protein in it. http://www.mealsforyou.com/cgi-bin/recipeCategory?category.protein+orderBy.protein_o+dir.asc Shanti/Mary-Anne
Posted on: 26 January 2008 - 5:27pm

rcsbriskethouse says :

thank you all so much for the information, i and the grillmaster appreciate all of your efforts to make this happen keep up the good work guys and we'll woop this thing :) C's Brisket house and catering RC's Keepin it real
Posted on: 27 January 2008 - 11:39pm

rcsbriskethouse says :

heres more information on ingredients we can use from brian to all the foodies out there Body: please comment if your doing anything with this or not? For all you culinary experts that are on board in creating recipes and meals for the children like my baby girl braiya, here are some more ingredients to work with during your creative process. again, brianna and i would love to thank all of you who are helping in this or so ever dearing project. Cereals and Grains (generally have about 2 grams protein in ½ cup or 1 slice. For small bagels, english muffins, 1 serving = ½.) cold cereals hot cereals noodles bread croutons bagels rolls pita bread tortillas cookies cake popcorn English muffins animal crackers goldfish (about 15) saltines (about 5) rice potatoes corn yams • Vegetables (generally have about 1 gram protein in ½ cup) broccoli vegetable juices mushrooms squash green beans/peas cabbage spinach asparagus cauliflower radishes lettuce onions carrots (1 whole or 10 baby) • Fruits (½ cup of fruit has a trace amount of protein) apples bananas oranges kiwis raisins fruit cocktail apricots pears grapes peaches cherries berries tomatoes fruit juices melon • Cereals and Grains have about 2 grams protein in ½ cup serving. • Vegetables have about 1 gram protein in ½ cup serving. • Fruits have trace amounts of protein in ½ cup serving—you can count trace amounts as zero. • Corn and potatoes are in the cereals and grains group, not in the vegetable group. RC's Brisket house and catering RC's Keepin it real
Posted on: 29 January 2008 - 3:01pm

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