





Back in 2011, industrial designer Hannes Harms, created a prototype system that uses edible radio-frequency ID (RFID) tags to track food from production to your plate. The smart plate that comes with the system can then read the RFID tags and tell you exactly what’s in your dinner. In 2016, a Canadian teen made smart cutlery that detects allergens, nutrients, and toxins. The product is apparently still in the research and development phase but the spoon, fork, and chopstick could be a meal changer.



The syndrome is also referred to as pollen-food allergy syndrome and happens when the immune system is triggered by pollen and similar proteins in the food. People who have this type of allergy usually don’t react if the fruit or vegetable is cooked because heat changes the proteins the immune system usually reacts to.



It’s called alpha-gal allergy, and it’s totally thrown a wrench into how scientists thought allergies occur and how they’re triggered. For example, one huge difference with this allergy is that alpha-gal is a sugar, not a protein. Also reactions take hours to occur, while most food allergies happen within minutes of exposure.










Many adults seem to be confusing food intolerance with allergic reactions, according to the researchers. A food-intolerance reaction is usually limited to digestive issues and is quite mild in comparison to an allergic reaction, which involves an immune system response that affects multiple systems.









