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Brand New World For Gluten-Challenged

By HERWriter
 
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Healthy Eating related image Photo: Getty Images

If you're one of many people who've discovered after years of misery that you're gluten-intolerant, congratulations are in order. You've just walked through a doorway into a brand new world.

There's only one catch. You can't eat gluten. Not if you want to hold on to your newly-found health, you can't.

If you're trying to learn how to live without gluten, you may be discovering that it's present in many foods, medications and cosmetics.

It's popular in the bakery because of its unique flavor and consistency. For the inexperienced, baking without gluten can be a dismal experience, yielding dense and gummy doorstops.

While this may sound unappetizing, if you have celiac disease, gluten allergy or gluten sensitivity, don't sell your health for a toothsome pie, or flavorful loaf of bread. A plate of cookies or a stack of pancakes may be tempting but, the bald truth is, for the gluten-challenged these things are invitations to belly-ache, brain fog, muscle cramps and neurological repercussions.

As more people are found to be gluten-intolerant, food manufacturers are offering a wider variety of gluten-free products. Many chefs are concocting recipes for the gluten-challenged, revealing some of the secrets and finer points of gluten-free cooking so that what you cook tastes like food and not like hardened mud.

So it may be possible to have your cake and eat it too.

Guar gum and xanthum gum can be added to corn, rice or potato flours to create a reasonable substitute for wheat. Use corn starch instead of flour to thicken sauces, soups and stews. Use rice instead of bread to stuff a bird.

Once you have all the ingredients for your gluten-free baking extravaganza, you'll need to learn a few tricks unique to gluten-free cooking.

For instance, beating wheat dough that contains gluten for too long has a toughening up effect. But beating gluten-free dough for several minutes makes the dough lighter by beating air into it.

Gluten-free dough and batter are much stickier than their glutenous counterparts. Be sure to dampen or oil your hands.

Baking gluten-free bread can result in mush unless you remove a loaf from its pan partway through baking, then let it finish exposed on the oven rack. Gluten-free baking benefits from the use of pizza stones which offer a drier or crisper product.

Pick up some of the many gluten-free cookbooks now available, and start exploring your brand new, symptom-free, world.

Resources:

Gluten-Free Recipes and Tips
http://www.epicurious.com/articlesguides/howtocook/primers/glutenfreebaking

Can Baked Goods Taste Good without Gluten?
http://www.eatingwell.com/nutrition_health/gluten_free_diet/can_baked_goods_taste_good_without_gluten

How to Have a Gluten-Free Holiday
http://recipes.howstuffworks.com/menus/how-to-have-a-gluten-free-holiday.htm

Daily Diet: Gluten-Free Cooking
http://www.healthnews.com/nutrition-diet/daily-diet-gluten-free-cooking-4522.html

Visit Jody's website and blog at http://www.ncubator.ca and http://ncubator.ca/blogger

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We value and respect our HERWriters' experiences, but everyone is different. Many of our writers are speaking from personal experience, and what's worked for them may not work for you. Their articles are not a substitute for medical advice, although we hope you can gain knowledge from their insight.

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