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   From my allergy booklet 
 
 Food most likely to cause a reaction 
 
 Cereals and Grains 
 Breads, breakfast cereals, barley, wheat and rye flours and products made from these. i.e biscuits, cakes, pastries, triticale 
 
 Egg and related foods 
 Eggs, scrambled eggs, quiche 
 
 Fruit and vegetables 
 bananas, grapefruit, kiwifruit, lemons, limes, mandarins, mushrooms, onions, oranges, strawberries and other berries including their flavourings e.g toppings, tomatoes. 
 
 Meat fish and protein foods 
 fish and shell fish, all types nuts and seeds and their products - all types including cashews, hazelnuts, brazil nuts, almonds, walnuts, sesame seeds, poppy seed, sunflower seeds, tahini, hummus, nut butter, marzipan peanuts and peanut products. 
 
 Milk and diary 
 Cow's milk and all milk products, goats milk and goats milk products, lactoacidophilus products, sheeps milk and sheep milk products, soy milk and soy milk products. 
 
 Other 
 carob, chocolate, gelatin, herbs, honey, jam, jelly, junket, rennet, spices, stock cubes, yeast extract. 
 
 Food colours 
 artificial: 102,107,110, 122-129, 133, 142, 151, 155 
 natural: 160b 
 flavour enhancers, hydrolysed vegetable protein (HVP), monosodium glutamate 621, textured vegetable protein (TVP) 
 
 Preservatives 
 Anti-oxidants 310-321 
 benzoates 210-218 
 nitrates 249-252 
 nitrites 249-252 
 propionates 280-283 
 sorbates 200-203 
 sulphites 220-228 
 
 
 
 Foods least likely to cause a reaction 
 
 Cereals 
 ground rice, rice, rice cereal (plain unmalted), plain rice cakes, plain rice crackers, rice flour, rice pasta (egg free) 
 
 Fruits and vegetables 
 Apple, pear, potato, pumpkin, sweet potato (kumura), zuchinni (courgette) 
 
 Milk and Diary 
 Breast milk (rarely allergies can be passed through breastmilk and mothers diet may need modification) 
 
 Other cooking aids 
 Bicarbonate of soda, refined oils such as olive, canola, safflower, sunflower. Glucose, golder syrup, maize cornflour, milk free margarine, rice syrup (pure), sugar, wheat free baking powder, yeast (bakers/dried) 
 
 
 Basically the booklet says to introduce low allergy ones first and then anything not on the high allergy list and leave all the stuff on high allergy list until 12+months. But that is only neccessary if you think the baby is likely to have allergies, otherwise you can just follow the plunket guidelines for the ages to introduce each new food, it also says about introducing one food at a time so any reaction can be quickly traced and to start with a small amount of a new food and gradually increase each day if there are no symptoms
    
   
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