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The best in flight meal option for those suffering from reflux
Flight deals from the UKBest company for flying from Europe to AustraliaWhy is there a 'secret carrier' option for a flight?Is the word “bomb” muted in in-flight movies?Can I ask for two meals for my flight without paying extra?How are different meal ratios calculated for flights?Asking for a second helping of a meal only if available?Asking for first class meal while having economy class ticketWhat can I do if an airline cannot provide the meal I requested?What are the pros/cons of airlines selling tickets on a futures market?
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Someone who is suffering badly from reflux, they are on a very boring diet that excludes everything spicy, fried, fat etc. What is the best option to choose from for the in flight meals that one can pre order before their flight?
Do all airlines provide the same selection or it may be airline specific?
The flight is with Qatar: Sydney to Doha.
airlines in-flight-services
add a comment |
Someone who is suffering badly from reflux, they are on a very boring diet that excludes everything spicy, fried, fat etc. What is the best option to choose from for the in flight meals that one can pre order before their flight?
Do all airlines provide the same selection or it may be airline specific?
The flight is with Qatar: Sydney to Doha.
airlines in-flight-services
add a comment |
Someone who is suffering badly from reflux, they are on a very boring diet that excludes everything spicy, fried, fat etc. What is the best option to choose from for the in flight meals that one can pre order before their flight?
Do all airlines provide the same selection or it may be airline specific?
The flight is with Qatar: Sydney to Doha.
airlines in-flight-services
Someone who is suffering badly from reflux, they are on a very boring diet that excludes everything spicy, fried, fat etc. What is the best option to choose from for the in flight meals that one can pre order before their flight?
Do all airlines provide the same selection or it may be airline specific?
The flight is with Qatar: Sydney to Doha.
airlines in-flight-services
airlines in-flight-services
edited Jun 11 at 12:09
Uciebila
1,4831519
1,4831519
asked Jun 11 at 8:41
Jay RandomJay Random
12516
12516
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
They might consider special ordering a bland meal from Qatar Airways (insert "aren't normal airplane meals bland?" joke here):
Bland Meal (BLML) - This meal is for customers who prefer light and easily digestible foods that are low in fat and help prevent gastric discomfort. It may contain: Low-fat food items such as boiled meats, soft vegetables, mashed potatoes, milk, dairy products and steamed or poached prepared foods as a cooking style. Does not contain: Fried or fatty foods, nuts, garlic, onions, strong scented spice, pickles and mustard.
Every airline is a bit different. Not all may offer a bland meal and not all may use the same definition (they may also be combined; there's no guarantee that a bland meal won't also, hypothetically, be vegan). You might contact the airline's disability services office for further information on their specific policies, though specific menu details generally aren't available in advance.
7
I once accidentally selected this option when checking into Qatar Airways. A flight attendant approached me at the beginning of the flight asking why would I choose such an option. I told him it was unintentional and they gave me a normal meal : )
– nobism
Jun 12 at 4:17
15
Ouch. Easy digestible meal that can contain milk, a substance that 2/3 of humanity can't digest.
– Rg7x gW6a cQ3g
Jun 12 at 6:35
4
@Rg7xgW6acQ3g if you're specifically Lactose intolerant they have a separate special meal for that.
– Dustybin80
Jun 12 at 14:27
3
@Dustybin80 it is called Blandest Meal (BLestML)
– undefined
Jun 12 at 15:44
3
@user71659 By virtue of being a mostly white country, the US has a much higher large of the population who can digest lactose. It's no surprise medical guidelines developed in the US overlooks the dietary needs of other populations. So no, QA isn't to blame, it's just the guidelines that are bad.
– Azor Ahai
Jun 12 at 19:39
|
show 1 more comment
The best option is: buy you own food (in advance).
Airlines have different options, and non-spicy is often a default (but there are other extra options): nobody wants to give children too spicy food. And spicy in general is not so good for air travels.
Unfortunately, it seems to me that often they forget such options, or it is far worse than the normal menu (vegetarian is sometimes an exception).
I would recommend you to buy some alternative food, and then mix with what they give you (e.g. fruits and salads, etc.).
A few weeks before your travel you should check regular menus on the airline's website, you may want to change it (e.g. from/to vegetarian). Unfortunately you never see special menus, and you may change special menu only with long advance notice. [But so, be prepared with your own food. A flight delay will "erase" all your special foods].
For the other question:
Menus and codes are standardized by IATA (about what may and must not contain, not the real menu), and sent coded in the ticket information. The list is long, but usually airlines will offer only few of them (and often a very blended and reduced one, which covers many options, as a fruit salad and nothing more).
9
Beware that brining your own meal through security can be difficult, since many common meal items (sauces, soups etc) are banned under liquid/gel restrictions, and they will likely not be able to heat anything either. Sandwiches and the like are fine though.
– jpatokal
Jun 11 at 12:21
I have generally stopped eating airplane food (I just bring my own: eggs, sandwiches, fruits, nuts, whatever). I feel much better. Airplane food should just be avoided (unless you are in business ;)
– jerlich
Jun 11 at 19:34
and even special meals are often not as advertised. I have Type 2 diabetes so always order the diabetic meal when offered. Last several flights it ALWAYS had a lot of sugary and starchy stuff in it. Fruit, cake, cookies, pasta, rice, potatoes formed the bulk of every meal.
– jwenting
Jun 12 at 3:47
1
This takes the medal. For people with food restrictions, expecting random other people to prepare food to suit their requirements is a pipe dream. That is especially so when the other is not in the food business and handles food only as a sideline; Qatar flies airplanes for a living. They are competent at NOTAMs, not gluten.
– Harper
Jun 12 at 15:33
3
@Harper: OTOH the catering is sub-contracted to specialized companies. Often, if you get the correct meal, it is as expected (gluten-free all in plastic bags, to avoid contamination). Just they expertise, the "logistic" part, fails. Often the correct meal is not loaded in your flight.
– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jun 12 at 15:39
|
show 4 more comments
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
They might consider special ordering a bland meal from Qatar Airways (insert "aren't normal airplane meals bland?" joke here):
Bland Meal (BLML) - This meal is for customers who prefer light and easily digestible foods that are low in fat and help prevent gastric discomfort. It may contain: Low-fat food items such as boiled meats, soft vegetables, mashed potatoes, milk, dairy products and steamed or poached prepared foods as a cooking style. Does not contain: Fried or fatty foods, nuts, garlic, onions, strong scented spice, pickles and mustard.
Every airline is a bit different. Not all may offer a bland meal and not all may use the same definition (they may also be combined; there's no guarantee that a bland meal won't also, hypothetically, be vegan). You might contact the airline's disability services office for further information on their specific policies, though specific menu details generally aren't available in advance.
7
I once accidentally selected this option when checking into Qatar Airways. A flight attendant approached me at the beginning of the flight asking why would I choose such an option. I told him it was unintentional and they gave me a normal meal : )
– nobism
Jun 12 at 4:17
15
Ouch. Easy digestible meal that can contain milk, a substance that 2/3 of humanity can't digest.
– Rg7x gW6a cQ3g
Jun 12 at 6:35
4
@Rg7xgW6acQ3g if you're specifically Lactose intolerant they have a separate special meal for that.
– Dustybin80
Jun 12 at 14:27
3
@Dustybin80 it is called Blandest Meal (BLestML)
– undefined
Jun 12 at 15:44
3
@user71659 By virtue of being a mostly white country, the US has a much higher large of the population who can digest lactose. It's no surprise medical guidelines developed in the US overlooks the dietary needs of other populations. So no, QA isn't to blame, it's just the guidelines that are bad.
– Azor Ahai
Jun 12 at 19:39
|
show 1 more comment
They might consider special ordering a bland meal from Qatar Airways (insert "aren't normal airplane meals bland?" joke here):
Bland Meal (BLML) - This meal is for customers who prefer light and easily digestible foods that are low in fat and help prevent gastric discomfort. It may contain: Low-fat food items such as boiled meats, soft vegetables, mashed potatoes, milk, dairy products and steamed or poached prepared foods as a cooking style. Does not contain: Fried or fatty foods, nuts, garlic, onions, strong scented spice, pickles and mustard.
Every airline is a bit different. Not all may offer a bland meal and not all may use the same definition (they may also be combined; there's no guarantee that a bland meal won't also, hypothetically, be vegan). You might contact the airline's disability services office for further information on their specific policies, though specific menu details generally aren't available in advance.
7
I once accidentally selected this option when checking into Qatar Airways. A flight attendant approached me at the beginning of the flight asking why would I choose such an option. I told him it was unintentional and they gave me a normal meal : )
– nobism
Jun 12 at 4:17
15
Ouch. Easy digestible meal that can contain milk, a substance that 2/3 of humanity can't digest.
– Rg7x gW6a cQ3g
Jun 12 at 6:35
4
@Rg7xgW6acQ3g if you're specifically Lactose intolerant they have a separate special meal for that.
– Dustybin80
Jun 12 at 14:27
3
@Dustybin80 it is called Blandest Meal (BLestML)
– undefined
Jun 12 at 15:44
3
@user71659 By virtue of being a mostly white country, the US has a much higher large of the population who can digest lactose. It's no surprise medical guidelines developed in the US overlooks the dietary needs of other populations. So no, QA isn't to blame, it's just the guidelines that are bad.
– Azor Ahai
Jun 12 at 19:39
|
show 1 more comment
They might consider special ordering a bland meal from Qatar Airways (insert "aren't normal airplane meals bland?" joke here):
Bland Meal (BLML) - This meal is for customers who prefer light and easily digestible foods that are low in fat and help prevent gastric discomfort. It may contain: Low-fat food items such as boiled meats, soft vegetables, mashed potatoes, milk, dairy products and steamed or poached prepared foods as a cooking style. Does not contain: Fried or fatty foods, nuts, garlic, onions, strong scented spice, pickles and mustard.
Every airline is a bit different. Not all may offer a bland meal and not all may use the same definition (they may also be combined; there's no guarantee that a bland meal won't also, hypothetically, be vegan). You might contact the airline's disability services office for further information on their specific policies, though specific menu details generally aren't available in advance.
They might consider special ordering a bland meal from Qatar Airways (insert "aren't normal airplane meals bland?" joke here):
Bland Meal (BLML) - This meal is for customers who prefer light and easily digestible foods that are low in fat and help prevent gastric discomfort. It may contain: Low-fat food items such as boiled meats, soft vegetables, mashed potatoes, milk, dairy products and steamed or poached prepared foods as a cooking style. Does not contain: Fried or fatty foods, nuts, garlic, onions, strong scented spice, pickles and mustard.
Every airline is a bit different. Not all may offer a bland meal and not all may use the same definition (they may also be combined; there's no guarantee that a bland meal won't also, hypothetically, be vegan). You might contact the airline's disability services office for further information on their specific policies, though specific menu details generally aren't available in advance.
edited Jun 12 at 7:34
answered Jun 11 at 8:47
Zach LiptonZach Lipton
64.8k12199260
64.8k12199260
7
I once accidentally selected this option when checking into Qatar Airways. A flight attendant approached me at the beginning of the flight asking why would I choose such an option. I told him it was unintentional and they gave me a normal meal : )
– nobism
Jun 12 at 4:17
15
Ouch. Easy digestible meal that can contain milk, a substance that 2/3 of humanity can't digest.
– Rg7x gW6a cQ3g
Jun 12 at 6:35
4
@Rg7xgW6acQ3g if you're specifically Lactose intolerant they have a separate special meal for that.
– Dustybin80
Jun 12 at 14:27
3
@Dustybin80 it is called Blandest Meal (BLestML)
– undefined
Jun 12 at 15:44
3
@user71659 By virtue of being a mostly white country, the US has a much higher large of the population who can digest lactose. It's no surprise medical guidelines developed in the US overlooks the dietary needs of other populations. So no, QA isn't to blame, it's just the guidelines that are bad.
– Azor Ahai
Jun 12 at 19:39
|
show 1 more comment
7
I once accidentally selected this option when checking into Qatar Airways. A flight attendant approached me at the beginning of the flight asking why would I choose such an option. I told him it was unintentional and they gave me a normal meal : )
– nobism
Jun 12 at 4:17
15
Ouch. Easy digestible meal that can contain milk, a substance that 2/3 of humanity can't digest.
– Rg7x gW6a cQ3g
Jun 12 at 6:35
4
@Rg7xgW6acQ3g if you're specifically Lactose intolerant they have a separate special meal for that.
– Dustybin80
Jun 12 at 14:27
3
@Dustybin80 it is called Blandest Meal (BLestML)
– undefined
Jun 12 at 15:44
3
@user71659 By virtue of being a mostly white country, the US has a much higher large of the population who can digest lactose. It's no surprise medical guidelines developed in the US overlooks the dietary needs of other populations. So no, QA isn't to blame, it's just the guidelines that are bad.
– Azor Ahai
Jun 12 at 19:39
7
7
I once accidentally selected this option when checking into Qatar Airways. A flight attendant approached me at the beginning of the flight asking why would I choose such an option. I told him it was unintentional and they gave me a normal meal : )
– nobism
Jun 12 at 4:17
I once accidentally selected this option when checking into Qatar Airways. A flight attendant approached me at the beginning of the flight asking why would I choose such an option. I told him it was unintentional and they gave me a normal meal : )
– nobism
Jun 12 at 4:17
15
15
Ouch. Easy digestible meal that can contain milk, a substance that 2/3 of humanity can't digest.
– Rg7x gW6a cQ3g
Jun 12 at 6:35
Ouch. Easy digestible meal that can contain milk, a substance that 2/3 of humanity can't digest.
– Rg7x gW6a cQ3g
Jun 12 at 6:35
4
4
@Rg7xgW6acQ3g if you're specifically Lactose intolerant they have a separate special meal for that.
– Dustybin80
Jun 12 at 14:27
@Rg7xgW6acQ3g if you're specifically Lactose intolerant they have a separate special meal for that.
– Dustybin80
Jun 12 at 14:27
3
3
@Dustybin80 it is called Blandest Meal (BLestML)
– undefined
Jun 12 at 15:44
@Dustybin80 it is called Blandest Meal (BLestML)
– undefined
Jun 12 at 15:44
3
3
@user71659 By virtue of being a mostly white country, the US has a much higher large of the population who can digest lactose. It's no surprise medical guidelines developed in the US overlooks the dietary needs of other populations. So no, QA isn't to blame, it's just the guidelines that are bad.
– Azor Ahai
Jun 12 at 19:39
@user71659 By virtue of being a mostly white country, the US has a much higher large of the population who can digest lactose. It's no surprise medical guidelines developed in the US overlooks the dietary needs of other populations. So no, QA isn't to blame, it's just the guidelines that are bad.
– Azor Ahai
Jun 12 at 19:39
|
show 1 more comment
The best option is: buy you own food (in advance).
Airlines have different options, and non-spicy is often a default (but there are other extra options): nobody wants to give children too spicy food. And spicy in general is not so good for air travels.
Unfortunately, it seems to me that often they forget such options, or it is far worse than the normal menu (vegetarian is sometimes an exception).
I would recommend you to buy some alternative food, and then mix with what they give you (e.g. fruits and salads, etc.).
A few weeks before your travel you should check regular menus on the airline's website, you may want to change it (e.g. from/to vegetarian). Unfortunately you never see special menus, and you may change special menu only with long advance notice. [But so, be prepared with your own food. A flight delay will "erase" all your special foods].
For the other question:
Menus and codes are standardized by IATA (about what may and must not contain, not the real menu), and sent coded in the ticket information. The list is long, but usually airlines will offer only few of them (and often a very blended and reduced one, which covers many options, as a fruit salad and nothing more).
9
Beware that brining your own meal through security can be difficult, since many common meal items (sauces, soups etc) are banned under liquid/gel restrictions, and they will likely not be able to heat anything either. Sandwiches and the like are fine though.
– jpatokal
Jun 11 at 12:21
I have generally stopped eating airplane food (I just bring my own: eggs, sandwiches, fruits, nuts, whatever). I feel much better. Airplane food should just be avoided (unless you are in business ;)
– jerlich
Jun 11 at 19:34
and even special meals are often not as advertised. I have Type 2 diabetes so always order the diabetic meal when offered. Last several flights it ALWAYS had a lot of sugary and starchy stuff in it. Fruit, cake, cookies, pasta, rice, potatoes formed the bulk of every meal.
– jwenting
Jun 12 at 3:47
1
This takes the medal. For people with food restrictions, expecting random other people to prepare food to suit their requirements is a pipe dream. That is especially so when the other is not in the food business and handles food only as a sideline; Qatar flies airplanes for a living. They are competent at NOTAMs, not gluten.
– Harper
Jun 12 at 15:33
3
@Harper: OTOH the catering is sub-contracted to specialized companies. Often, if you get the correct meal, it is as expected (gluten-free all in plastic bags, to avoid contamination). Just they expertise, the "logistic" part, fails. Often the correct meal is not loaded in your flight.
– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jun 12 at 15:39
|
show 4 more comments
The best option is: buy you own food (in advance).
Airlines have different options, and non-spicy is often a default (but there are other extra options): nobody wants to give children too spicy food. And spicy in general is not so good for air travels.
Unfortunately, it seems to me that often they forget such options, or it is far worse than the normal menu (vegetarian is sometimes an exception).
I would recommend you to buy some alternative food, and then mix with what they give you (e.g. fruits and salads, etc.).
A few weeks before your travel you should check regular menus on the airline's website, you may want to change it (e.g. from/to vegetarian). Unfortunately you never see special menus, and you may change special menu only with long advance notice. [But so, be prepared with your own food. A flight delay will "erase" all your special foods].
For the other question:
Menus and codes are standardized by IATA (about what may and must not contain, not the real menu), and sent coded in the ticket information. The list is long, but usually airlines will offer only few of them (and often a very blended and reduced one, which covers many options, as a fruit salad and nothing more).
9
Beware that brining your own meal through security can be difficult, since many common meal items (sauces, soups etc) are banned under liquid/gel restrictions, and they will likely not be able to heat anything either. Sandwiches and the like are fine though.
– jpatokal
Jun 11 at 12:21
I have generally stopped eating airplane food (I just bring my own: eggs, sandwiches, fruits, nuts, whatever). I feel much better. Airplane food should just be avoided (unless you are in business ;)
– jerlich
Jun 11 at 19:34
and even special meals are often not as advertised. I have Type 2 diabetes so always order the diabetic meal when offered. Last several flights it ALWAYS had a lot of sugary and starchy stuff in it. Fruit, cake, cookies, pasta, rice, potatoes formed the bulk of every meal.
– jwenting
Jun 12 at 3:47
1
This takes the medal. For people with food restrictions, expecting random other people to prepare food to suit their requirements is a pipe dream. That is especially so when the other is not in the food business and handles food only as a sideline; Qatar flies airplanes for a living. They are competent at NOTAMs, not gluten.
– Harper
Jun 12 at 15:33
3
@Harper: OTOH the catering is sub-contracted to specialized companies. Often, if you get the correct meal, it is as expected (gluten-free all in plastic bags, to avoid contamination). Just they expertise, the "logistic" part, fails. Often the correct meal is not loaded in your flight.
– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jun 12 at 15:39
|
show 4 more comments
The best option is: buy you own food (in advance).
Airlines have different options, and non-spicy is often a default (but there are other extra options): nobody wants to give children too spicy food. And spicy in general is not so good for air travels.
Unfortunately, it seems to me that often they forget such options, or it is far worse than the normal menu (vegetarian is sometimes an exception).
I would recommend you to buy some alternative food, and then mix with what they give you (e.g. fruits and salads, etc.).
A few weeks before your travel you should check regular menus on the airline's website, you may want to change it (e.g. from/to vegetarian). Unfortunately you never see special menus, and you may change special menu only with long advance notice. [But so, be prepared with your own food. A flight delay will "erase" all your special foods].
For the other question:
Menus and codes are standardized by IATA (about what may and must not contain, not the real menu), and sent coded in the ticket information. The list is long, but usually airlines will offer only few of them (and often a very blended and reduced one, which covers many options, as a fruit salad and nothing more).
The best option is: buy you own food (in advance).
Airlines have different options, and non-spicy is often a default (but there are other extra options): nobody wants to give children too spicy food. And spicy in general is not so good for air travels.
Unfortunately, it seems to me that often they forget such options, or it is far worse than the normal menu (vegetarian is sometimes an exception).
I would recommend you to buy some alternative food, and then mix with what they give you (e.g. fruits and salads, etc.).
A few weeks before your travel you should check regular menus on the airline's website, you may want to change it (e.g. from/to vegetarian). Unfortunately you never see special menus, and you may change special menu only with long advance notice. [But so, be prepared with your own food. A flight delay will "erase" all your special foods].
For the other question:
Menus and codes are standardized by IATA (about what may and must not contain, not the real menu), and sent coded in the ticket information. The list is long, but usually airlines will offer only few of them (and often a very blended and reduced one, which covers many options, as a fruit salad and nothing more).
edited Jun 12 at 7:31
Glorfindel
3,46652641
3,46652641
answered Jun 11 at 12:15
Giacomo CatenazziGiacomo Catenazzi
3,3071022
3,3071022
9
Beware that brining your own meal through security can be difficult, since many common meal items (sauces, soups etc) are banned under liquid/gel restrictions, and they will likely not be able to heat anything either. Sandwiches and the like are fine though.
– jpatokal
Jun 11 at 12:21
I have generally stopped eating airplane food (I just bring my own: eggs, sandwiches, fruits, nuts, whatever). I feel much better. Airplane food should just be avoided (unless you are in business ;)
– jerlich
Jun 11 at 19:34
and even special meals are often not as advertised. I have Type 2 diabetes so always order the diabetic meal when offered. Last several flights it ALWAYS had a lot of sugary and starchy stuff in it. Fruit, cake, cookies, pasta, rice, potatoes formed the bulk of every meal.
– jwenting
Jun 12 at 3:47
1
This takes the medal. For people with food restrictions, expecting random other people to prepare food to suit their requirements is a pipe dream. That is especially so when the other is not in the food business and handles food only as a sideline; Qatar flies airplanes for a living. They are competent at NOTAMs, not gluten.
– Harper
Jun 12 at 15:33
3
@Harper: OTOH the catering is sub-contracted to specialized companies. Often, if you get the correct meal, it is as expected (gluten-free all in plastic bags, to avoid contamination). Just they expertise, the "logistic" part, fails. Often the correct meal is not loaded in your flight.
– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jun 12 at 15:39
|
show 4 more comments
9
Beware that brining your own meal through security can be difficult, since many common meal items (sauces, soups etc) are banned under liquid/gel restrictions, and they will likely not be able to heat anything either. Sandwiches and the like are fine though.
– jpatokal
Jun 11 at 12:21
I have generally stopped eating airplane food (I just bring my own: eggs, sandwiches, fruits, nuts, whatever). I feel much better. Airplane food should just be avoided (unless you are in business ;)
– jerlich
Jun 11 at 19:34
and even special meals are often not as advertised. I have Type 2 diabetes so always order the diabetic meal when offered. Last several flights it ALWAYS had a lot of sugary and starchy stuff in it. Fruit, cake, cookies, pasta, rice, potatoes formed the bulk of every meal.
– jwenting
Jun 12 at 3:47
1
This takes the medal. For people with food restrictions, expecting random other people to prepare food to suit their requirements is a pipe dream. That is especially so when the other is not in the food business and handles food only as a sideline; Qatar flies airplanes for a living. They are competent at NOTAMs, not gluten.
– Harper
Jun 12 at 15:33
3
@Harper: OTOH the catering is sub-contracted to specialized companies. Often, if you get the correct meal, it is as expected (gluten-free all in plastic bags, to avoid contamination). Just they expertise, the "logistic" part, fails. Often the correct meal is not loaded in your flight.
– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jun 12 at 15:39
9
9
Beware that brining your own meal through security can be difficult, since many common meal items (sauces, soups etc) are banned under liquid/gel restrictions, and they will likely not be able to heat anything either. Sandwiches and the like are fine though.
– jpatokal
Jun 11 at 12:21
Beware that brining your own meal through security can be difficult, since many common meal items (sauces, soups etc) are banned under liquid/gel restrictions, and they will likely not be able to heat anything either. Sandwiches and the like are fine though.
– jpatokal
Jun 11 at 12:21
I have generally stopped eating airplane food (I just bring my own: eggs, sandwiches, fruits, nuts, whatever). I feel much better. Airplane food should just be avoided (unless you are in business ;)
– jerlich
Jun 11 at 19:34
I have generally stopped eating airplane food (I just bring my own: eggs, sandwiches, fruits, nuts, whatever). I feel much better. Airplane food should just be avoided (unless you are in business ;)
– jerlich
Jun 11 at 19:34
and even special meals are often not as advertised. I have Type 2 diabetes so always order the diabetic meal when offered. Last several flights it ALWAYS had a lot of sugary and starchy stuff in it. Fruit, cake, cookies, pasta, rice, potatoes formed the bulk of every meal.
– jwenting
Jun 12 at 3:47
and even special meals are often not as advertised. I have Type 2 diabetes so always order the diabetic meal when offered. Last several flights it ALWAYS had a lot of sugary and starchy stuff in it. Fruit, cake, cookies, pasta, rice, potatoes formed the bulk of every meal.
– jwenting
Jun 12 at 3:47
1
1
This takes the medal. For people with food restrictions, expecting random other people to prepare food to suit their requirements is a pipe dream. That is especially so when the other is not in the food business and handles food only as a sideline; Qatar flies airplanes for a living. They are competent at NOTAMs, not gluten.
– Harper
Jun 12 at 15:33
This takes the medal. For people with food restrictions, expecting random other people to prepare food to suit their requirements is a pipe dream. That is especially so when the other is not in the food business and handles food only as a sideline; Qatar flies airplanes for a living. They are competent at NOTAMs, not gluten.
– Harper
Jun 12 at 15:33
3
3
@Harper: OTOH the catering is sub-contracted to specialized companies. Often, if you get the correct meal, it is as expected (gluten-free all in plastic bags, to avoid contamination). Just they expertise, the "logistic" part, fails. Often the correct meal is not loaded in your flight.
– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jun 12 at 15:39
@Harper: OTOH the catering is sub-contracted to specialized companies. Often, if you get the correct meal, it is as expected (gluten-free all in plastic bags, to avoid contamination). Just they expertise, the "logistic" part, fails. Often the correct meal is not loaded in your flight.
– Giacomo Catenazzi
Jun 12 at 15:39
|
show 4 more comments
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