Ask Ingrid – Your Expert for Nutrition & Special Diets
Struggling with fructose, lactose, sorbitol, gluten, FODMAPs, or histamine? Ask Ingrid is here to help. This app offers scientifically-backed support for managing food intolerances and special diets in your daily life, making it easier to enjoy meals with confidence.
Key Features:
- Food Check: Get detailed information on how well different foods fit your dietary needs, covering fructose, lactose, sorbitol, gluten, histamine, and FODMAPs.
- Product Scan: Simply scan packaged items or search for fresh foods to receive instant insights.
- Scientifically Sound Data: All information is based on rigorous research and developed in collaboration with experts from the renowned European nmi-portal.
- Community Knowledge (Pro Feature): Access anonymized ratings from others with similar dietary restrictions to see how they rate various foods.
- Individual Recommendations: Receive personalized lists of suitable foods tailored to your needs.
- News Feed: Stay updated with the latest articles on healthy eating and food intolerances.
- Food and Symptom Diary: Track your diet and symptoms to better understand which foods work for you (available with a subscription).
Try It for Free:
The free version allows 2 scans and 2 queries per day. Upgrade to the Pro version (approximately 8 cents per day) for unlimited scans, full access to the symptom and food diary, community ratings, and detailed analyses. With an annual subscription, you can try the Pro version free for 7 days.
Trusted by Science and Users:
Ask Ingrid combines cutting-edge scientific findings with real-world experiences from hundreds of thousands of users, ensuring you receive both expert knowledge and practical insights.
Have questions or feedback? Reach out to us at [email protected]. If you love Ingrid, we’d appreciate a 5-star review!
Privacy Policy: http://frag-ingrid.com/datenschutz/
Keywords: food intolerances, FODMAP, gluten-free, lactose, fructose, symptom tracker, diet app, product scanner, personalized nutrition, health management