gluten free
hazelfg
Posts: 6 Member
I am not new, but every time I got started , things happened. I hope I can put this on my tablet as well, as we are gone a lot. I will try !! any one else need gluten free ? Tell me what you eat please. I am new to that way of eating ! My name is Fran, 67 years old.
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Replies
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I am not new, but every time I got started , things happened. I hope I can put this on my tablet as well, as we are gone a lot. I will try !! any one else need gluten free ? Tell me what you eat please. I am new to that way of eating ! My name is Fran, 67 years old.
I am reading a book called "Wheat Belly" which takes diet a bit further with gluten free.
If others have had some experience with this, I'd sure like to know.
I am not sold on gluten free yet.
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I have to be gluten free as i found out I have Celiacs and I love the rice pastas and three bakers bread is awesome! however I miss pizza and breadsticks still havnt found a good gf kind yet. If I stick to it I feel amazing I keep the weight off I can go to the bathroom like a real person! However not knowing for so long and tasting real food is hard and i slip up from time to time im only human...0
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My husband I eat no gluten at home although I allow him to eat it outside the house. We buy gluten free Soy Sauce and we keep Udi's GF bread in the freezer. Our main source of carbs is naturally GF -- rice. We also eat potatoes and thus do not miss bread.0
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I've been Gluten free due to Celiacs for almost 3 years. I eat a LOT of fruits and vegetables, egg whites, Blue diamond almonds, Breyers Icecream, Greek yogurt, tuna fish, salmon, flax seeds, Chex gluten free original oatmeal, Pb2, Franklin Farms veggiburger, Tofu, baked potato, Quest protein bars, Sam mills gluten free pastas, string cheese, Udi's whole grain gluten free bread, uncle bens brown rice, Snyder's gluten free pretzels, ect... On the rare times that I go to McDonald's I do eat the small fries and haven't had a problem with them. I also get their Premium Bacon Ranch salad with grilled chicken and Newman's Own low fat dressing... If I need to fix something quick for dinner I found that Amys gluten free frozen meals taste good and most are not high in fat and sodium.0
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Has your doctor instructed you to go gluten free, is it just something you want to try? Only about 8% of the population actually have a medical problem with gluten. I'm not saying it's a bad idea, just maybe unnecessary.0
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I was diagnosed yesterday with Celiac disease and will see a dietician next week and get blood work done for some malnutrition concerns. I feel so overwhelmed! I didn't realize that so many products have wheat in them! I got so sick from teriyaki sauce this week. My husband and I are now downloading apps with scanners to find hidden gluten. I'm also lactose intolerant. I'm literally feeling like this food change will be impossible0
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jupitermoon7 wrote: »I was diagnosed yesterday with Celiac disease and will see a dietician next week and get blood work done for some malnutrition concerns. I feel so overwhelmed! I didn't realize that so many products have wheat in them! I got so sick from teriyaki sauce this week. My husband and I are now downloading apps with scanners to find hidden gluten. I'm also lactose intolerant. I'm literally feeling like this food change will be impossible
I felt the same way after being diagnosed with Celiacs 3 years ago. At first it was very overwhelming because as you said, wheat is in so many things that we consume today. However, with the help of scanning apps, and from speaking with others with this disease it has gotten so much easier. I think the cross contamination has been the hardest this for me.0 -
I have a wheat allergy, but all the gluten free foods help a lot. I have a few other allergies, carrots, beef, yeast & soy - so I eat almost 0 processed foods. I have a lot of problems when I eat corn products, but didn't have a positive allergy test for corn
I haven't been doing carbs for breakfast or lunch, but dinner I rotate buckwheat pasta, lentil pasta, rice, potatoes, cauliflower (mashed), sometimes I do a rice tortilla toasted.
I did eat a bunch of potato chips the other day at a work part - but I brought them0 -
Oh & once in awhile I will eat against the grain pizza crust or baguette - really good & high in calories, but I think it's better than wheat!0
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I've been gluten free for over 10 years. While there are TONS of gluten free options out there now, I try to stay away from them as really, they are no better for you than their gluten counterparts (processed with a ton of crap in them). I do a lot of shopping at the asian market. I get rice noodles and rice there (although we really don't eat much of either). I eat a primarily vegan diet so my foods consist of a lot of fruits/veggies/salads/beans/nuts and seeds.
One of my favorites is to spiralize squash (zucchini or yellow) and make those my "pasta". We do purchase the Udi's premade pizza crusts though... and use those to make awesome veggie pizzas with.0 -
For those new to the transition, understand it will feel overwhelming in the beginning. When my daughter was first diagnosed with allergies I thought "oh... wheat allergy, no problem! I'll buy white bread" LOL I remember standing in the grocery store crying. You learn ways around things. Now, if you come across a recipe that calls for cream of chicken or mushroom soup, you make your own (I never do the mushroom... I just take a chicken or vegetable stock (veggie if I'm eating it). Melt some butter... throw in some rice flour to make a rue... then add stock till it's the consistency you need for the recipe. Look out for things like soy sauce (contains gluten) and get tamari or braggs aminos instead. Spices have hidden gluten in them quite often. The lovely thing about gluten is that it's a top 8 and HAS to be called out on the ingredient list, so you just learn to read labels and look for the WHEAT at the allergen section. Now a days gluten free has become so common, it's significantly easier than when I first started on this journey. I've become a pro at it, so if anyone has questions or needs ways to modify recipes, just add me and I'm happy to help out. I remember how helpless I felt in the beginning.0
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Fran you don't need to eat gluten free if you don't have coeliac disease. Gluten is not actually unhealthy.
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My husband went gluten free after doing an elimination diet and figuring out that gluten is what had been causing his joint pain everywhere in his body for 20 years. His joints only hurt now if he gives in to a craving and eats something with gluten in it. We found a really good bread and baking mix that tastes fantastic. It's called Pamela's. Our local grocery stores carry it now so it should be easy to find. He also uses gluten free pasta noodles from Tinkyada brown rice pasta which Wal Mart carries that taste way better than the other ones we have tried.0
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Patttience wrote: »Fran you don't need to eat gluten free if you don't have coeliac disease. Gluten is not actually unhealthy.
This is so true. Personally if I didn't have CD I never would have gone GF.0 -
Patttience wrote: »Fran you don't need to eat gluten free if you don't have coeliac disease. Gluten is not actually unhealthy.
This is so true. Personally if I didn't have CD I never would have gone GF.
I disagree with this on a certain level. Unless you are eating organic wheat, you are eating genetically modified wheat which has it's own set of health issues. Secondary to that, wheat causes an inflammatory response in the body, so anyone with arthritis or joint issues will literally feel a million times better eliminating it. It's not all that we've been made out to think it is.0 -
Patttience wrote: »Fran you don't need to eat gluten free if you don't have coeliac disease. Gluten is not actually unhealthy.
This is so true. Personally if I didn't have CD I never would have gone GF.
I disagree with this on a certain level. Unless you are eating organic wheat, you are eating genetically modified wheat which has it's own set of health issues. Secondary to that, wheat causes an inflammatory response in the body, so anyone with arthritis or joint issues will literally feel a million times better eliminating it. It's not all that we've been made out to think it is.
So true!0 -
Patttience wrote: »Fran you don't need to eat gluten free if you don't have coeliac disease. Gluten is not actually unhealthy.
This is so true. Personally if I didn't have CD I never would have gone GF.
I disagree with this on a certain level. Unless you are eating organic wheat, you are eating genetically modified wheat which has it's own set of health issues. Secondary to that, wheat causes an inflammatory response in the body, so anyone with arthritis or joint issues will literally feel a million times better eliminating it. It's not all that we've been made out to think it is.
Here we go!!!! There are NO clinical studies out there which show that Gluten is "unhealthy" for "everyone". Those things that you mention here are are also caused by other things, not Gluten. There is no need for a heathy person without CD or a sensitivity to Gluten to avoid it.0 -
No one ever said everyone would react.0
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Patttience wrote: »Fran you don't need to eat gluten free if you don't have coeliac disease. Gluten is not actually unhealthy.
This is so true. Personally if I didn't have CD I never would have gone GF.
I disagree with this on a certain level. Unless you are eating organic wheat, you are eating genetically modified wheat which has it's own set of health issues. Secondary to that, wheat causes an inflammatory response in the body, so anyone with arthritis or joint issues will literally feel a million times better eliminating it. It's not all that we've been made out to think it is.
Here we go!!!! There are NO clinical studies out there which show that Gluten is "unhealthy" for "everyone". Those things that you mention here are are also caused by other things, not Gluten. There is no need for a heathy person without CD or a sensitivity to Gluten to avoid it.
Except for all of us that feel a million times better NOT eating it... yet have never had any conclusive medical tests confirming CD or Sensitivity. A lot of people don't realize how crappy they truly feel until they stop eating it.
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For sure don't eat a bunch of crap food marketed gluten free. Just eat veggies, meats, and gluten free starches.0
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forwardmoving wrote: »
Lol, I was thinking the same thing when I read that.0 -
There are plenty of foods naturally gluten free, oatmeal, corn based tortillas,chips, and cereals. You can make your own veggie pastas with spaghetti squash. You can make cauliflower crusts and veggie chips. I do not eat gluten free but I do limit my consumption of white flour products. good luck!0
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I'm on day 3 of going GF since being diagnosed with Celiac. Actually probably today was the first day I was truly GF. I had no idea there was gluten in the dunkin donuts flavored coffee I was making at home until I researched it after I continued to be sick. Anyway even without being entirely GF I'm losing weight rapidly. I'm assuming this is a result of reducing the inflammation and not really weight loss. Has anyone else experienced this?0
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jupitermoon7 wrote: »I'm on day 3 of going GF since being diagnosed with Celiac. Actually probably today was the first day I was truly GF. I had no idea there was gluten in the dunkin donuts flavored coffee I was making at home until I researched it after I continued to be sick. Anyway even without being entirely GF I'm losing weight rapidly. I'm assuming this is a result of reducing the inflammation and not really weight loss. Has anyone else experienced this?
I lost weight as well. However, I think that had more to do with giving up things like cereal every morning, and soft pretzels, lol.0 -
I'm new and also going gluten free, I have lupus and study's say it can go In remission with a gluten free diet but I struggle because I have a family of 9 that I cook for and I find myself cheating, how do I cook everything and not be so tempted, I could use friends and support0
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I have just begun my GF journey and initially felt guilty that my family would suffer from my food restrictions. However after reading up on the seriousness of celiac and how cross contamination can put me back to square one and constantly sick I decided we could try to do it. For breakfast and lunch they still eat the same thing - cereal, waffles and sandwiches. I eat fruit or GF oatmeal and salads. For dinner we are using emeals.com it's a weekly menu planner and we use the gluten free options. It's been great not to come up with entirely new menu's. The only drawback is a lot of the meals don't have a starch so we cook potatoes or rice with it. Good luck!0
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I have been GF for a year now, apart from eating out I am finding it pretty easy as I tend to cook from scratch these days so I know what is in my food. I eat a wide variety of food.
Breakfast can be GF cereals, omelette, banana pancakes, a poached egg on a potato waffle, a piece of GF toast with smoked salmon and scrambled eggs. GF oat porridge with fruit or a tablespoon of peanut butter.
Lunch normally salad with chicken or tuna, home made soup, quark with fruit or cottage cheese on GF Crispbread.
Dinner: Fish/red meat/white meat with steamed vegetables. I love my slow cooker at the weekends, and use it a lot. Home made bolognese with GF pasta. Jacket potato with tuna and sweet corn or chicken.
Snacks: Homous/cottage cheese with vegetable sticks. Muller rice with fruit. Fruit salad, a handful of nuts and seeds.0 -
Patttience wrote: »Fran you don't need to eat gluten free if you don't have coeliac disease. Gluten is not actually unhealthy.
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Two of us in my home have Celiac; the other two eat GF at home. Cross-contamination is too big a risk, and it's really nice for our own kitchen to be 100% GF. The others can eat out and eat whatever they like; for us, home is the only place we feel we aren't taking a risk when we're eating. It was actually my husband's idea that the kitchen be 100% gluten free; I hadn't wanted to force that on him, but we've been fine, and I am beyond grateful to have such a supportive partner.
For me it's been seven or eight years at this point, and it's really no problem.
Back to the original post: I gained weight after going GF. Others in my family did, too, though a couple lost weight and bloating caused by reactions to gluten. At the Celiac conferences, they say both reactions are perfectly natural. Good luck. The first year is the hardest as you find gluten is in everything you love (I still miss malt), but it becomes second nature, and the food you can't have isn't tempting because you associate it with the horrible reactions you'll have. I dream of having a good bagel, but if you offered me a bite of a gluteny one, I would cringe away as though you were offering me a bite of arsenic or shards of glass.0
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