
Eating out when you have Crohn’s disease, a form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), can be a minefield. It’s often difficult to find a restaurant that serves food prepared in IBD-friendly ways while also being able to trust that any requests to omit specific trigger foods will be honored. As a result, many people living with Crohn’s believe that cooking for themselves is the simpler, more relaxed option — and the only one that’s guaranteed to deliver a meal designed specifically for their needs.
By making your own meals and deciding exactly what goes in your food, you can avoid ingredients that upset your digestive system. “The upside of cooking at home is that you have control,” says Christine Lothen-Kline, RDN, a registered dietitian with Crohn’s disease, who works at Mayo Clinic locations in Wisconsin.
Here are a few cooking tips from Lothen-Kline and home cooks with Crohn’s.
Identify Your Personal Food Triggers

Keep It Simple

You don’t have to be a trained chef to make nutritious, Crohn’s-friendly meals at home. Noelle Gardner of Los Angeles, who was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease in 2001, says many of her creations are one-pot dishes. “I’ll get some scallops or shrimp, toss in some fresh spinach, cut up a whole bulb of fennel, and then pour in some natural vegetable broth,” she says. “I throw it in one casserole dish and bake it for 45 minutes.”
Lothen-Kline is a big fan of omelets, even for dinner. Use eggs, green pepper, and a little cheese — if you can tolerate them — and you’ve got a meal, she says.
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Juice It or Blend It

Cook Your Produce

Make Creative Substitutions

If a particular food doesn’t agree with your digestive system, you can usually find a good substitute. For example, Gardner eats rice noodles or pasta made with arrowroot rather than wheat and uses almond or coconut milk in place of cow’s milk.
Choueiry Simkin makes “noodles” from long strips of zucchini or sweet potatoes and eats them in place of traditional pasta.
Opt for Extra-Easy-to-Digest Foods During Flares

“As we learn more about digestive disorders, we come up with many more healthy, nontriggering options and food and ingredient substitutes,” says Gardner.
Plan Ahead

“I pack my lunch the night before,” Choueiry Simkin says. “[And] if I’m going to be really busy during the week, I’ll cook dinners on Sunday and put them in the freezer.”
Also consider buying dinners made at meal-prep stores or using delivery services where you can put together several family-size dinners at once. All of the ingredients are prepped and precut for maximum time savings. Pop the prepared meals in the freezer and you’ve got healthy options ready to go when you need them, Lothen-Kline says.
The Takeaway
- With Crohn’s disease, cooking your own meals is often the best way to avoid food triggers because it gives you control over what goes into every dish.
- Try blending or juicing high-fiber fruits and vegetables, cooking produce until soft, and making food substitutions like zucchini noodles instead of wheat pasta.
- During a Crohn’s flare, opt for easy-to-digest foods by reducing insoluble fiber.

