Revolting Food

I'll come clean to start with.

I am a very fussy eater.  My diet is very bland.  It used to drive my mother to despair the way I wouldn't eat much variety of food.

I hate strong flavours, with the exception of kippers and sardines.  I eat very little meat.  And I eat very few vegetables either, and cooked vegetables are a very big no, except for potatoes in the form of chips or baked..  Lettuce, radish, watercress, and raw carrots are the only other vegetables I eat.  The only poultry I will eat is in the form of a boiled or poached hen's egg, except as part of the recipe for a cake.  Bread, nearly always wholemeal (I do like white bread but avoid it because it is less healthy.)  And milk, butter, cheddar cheese, yoghurt, and fruit (oranges, bananas, apples, peaches, strawberries, .... nothing exotic. ) There is very little else I will eat.  I know I won't like it and 'gag' at any attempt. An onion I could detect at fifty paces and it is amazing that others insist there is not onion in what they are eating - many things have onions or onion powder in them which I can detect..  Strong smelling foods I find thoroughly revolting.

This extends to cookery programmes on television, pictures in magazines, etc.  I have an absolute aversion.  Lidls the supermarket, was selling snails the other day, they looked just like snails collected from the garden.  How anyone could put them in their mouth I do not know, they looked disgusting.

This food aversion has been with me throughout my life.  Right from just after I was on solid food.  Nothing my mother did could force me to eat things I dd not want.  I believe this is strongly linked to being autistic. 

I am writing this not to ask for advice on how to eat.  Nor to express my concern over my diet.  I am 62 and am not dead yet and it has not done me a lot of harm.  I just wonder how many others of 'mature' years also have a restricted diet. And I also hope that it may reassure parents that if their children are very fussy, as long as they are eating some healthy food they need not worry too much.

The main problems it causes me are that I cannot eat out (except fish and chips with no funny stuff on them, just salt and vinegar.)  A meal at a restaurant I would look on as a punishment. Rather than that I would much rather sit down to two pieces of wholemeal bread and butter with a banana.

And if that is what I like, why should that be of concern to others?

Parents
  • Hi  i have just read your article on how your relationship is around food, i am currently researching this subject for a small autism champion group that i am part of and my areas of interest is around sensory diet/ food revulsion, i have enjoyed your detailed description of how you explain what you do like to eat and what foods do not sit well with you. if you feel you have any time to share with me any other experiences or suggestions of how i can put this together in a case study i would be very grateful for your help and authroisation to do so.  kind regards  

  • Fresh apples are the worst. Okder apples or cooked/baked ones are fine.

    All veggies are just fine, but dry potatoes are horrible.

    But steak, pork and dry chicken really don't sit well with me. Steak (however expensive) is impossible.

    Some fruits cause problems, like green melon.

    It is quite complicated :-D

Reply
  • Fresh apples are the worst. Okder apples or cooked/baked ones are fine.

    All veggies are just fine, but dry potatoes are horrible.

    But steak, pork and dry chicken really don't sit well with me. Steak (however expensive) is impossible.

    Some fruits cause problems, like green melon.

    It is quite complicated :-D

Children
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