How old are you? Lactose intolerance generally seems to kick in the older you get. That was my point - it will creep up on you, as it has me, despite my having poo poohed it (see what I did ther? ). This was a intended as a bit of useful help to the unaware. My advice to you is stay away from green salad. Or you will end up with brown salad, perhaps.
About 10 years ago i did the same (after giving up many things i guessed might be causing it) never looked back since. I am able to cope with milk in tea but that is all I consume. Cheese and Yoghurt don't seem to have the same effect so my breakfast is very yogurt/soy milk based.
Great post and great advice.
Excellent.From the New Scientist https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn27938-everything-you-need-to-know-about-lactose-intolerance/
'There are other misconceptions about the condition. For one thing, people who genuinely can’t absorb lactose can drink moderate amounts of milk – up to around 250 millilitres – in a sitting without symptoms, and they may be able to drink twice this amount if it is spread throughout the day . They can also usually consume yoghurt and hard cheese without problems, as most of the lactose is broken down by bacteria during their production. But they should avoid goat’s, buffalo’s, sheep’s or yak’s milk, all of which contain similar levels of lactose to cow’s milk.'
I'm fine with milk, I too drink about a pint a day.
A few years back I had dodgy guts, and had a load of tests which concluded there was nothing seriously wrong and that I was intolerant to *something*. Thus followed several months of hit and miss cutting out of foods.
Started with dairy (a fortnight without cheese was one of the longest of my life), no difference. Cut out wheat, no difference.
Turned out to be coffee, I had an espresso machine and was walloping down five or six decent coffees a day. Stopped them and two days later my guts had settled right down.
These days I have 2 or 3 instant coffees a week and the occasional proper coffee. Get a bit windy with white bread too but have been off bread altogether since Christmas in a bid to lose weight.
I have my own names. For example No 1 are Maltesers and 6 is "Treasure at the bottom of the sea".
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I’m not surprised you had problems! Coffee is a no go for me too. I’m not a big fan of it anyway but I can get away with a decent restaurant coffee after a meal. I think it can become addictive?
From the New Scientist https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn27938-everything-you-need-to-know-about-lactose-intolerance/
'But among those who are lactose intolerant, most have symptoms before they are 16. That’s not to say that adults can’t develop the condition – people can become temporarily lactose intolerant as a result of gastroenteritis, bowel injury and some other conditions.'
Gratified to learn from this that I am "normal" - at least in the bowel movement department! NSC - not just for the Albion things in life.
I become lactose intolerant after gut upsets. It's not so much the consistency of my stools, but griping pains. I'm using almond milk at this moment having had pains for three days.
OK, maybe it's just me
However when I have the pleasure of drinking the raw milk from Plaw Hatch Farm near Forest Row, I have no such problems. It has all of the good bacteria in it and I can drink it (and their cream) with abandon. I believe a lot of modern processes kill the inherent goodness in food; hence so many people have food intolerances these days. I also don't eat gluten, which is an inflammatory, and there are theories that we have bred wheat strains to be to be hardy and productive and that has made the gluten harder to digest.