Marshy
Well-known member
I have a colleague who has been told he needs a gluten free diet, are there any decent tasty options out there ? Escpecially on the sweet tooth side of things , any help appreciated.
I have a colleague who has been told he needs a gluten free diet, are there any decent tasty options out there ? Escpecially on the sweet tooth side of things , any help appreciated.
My boy is autistic and has been on a gluten free diet most of his life. There are plenty of decent cakes and biscuits available to satisfy your colleague's sweet tooth. Mrs crimbles coconut macaroons are a particular favourite. Tesco and Sainsbury's both have excellent free from selections.
GF bread is rank though... Probably better switching to rice cakes or Corn thins IMO.
I Have been gluten free since February, so daunting to start off reading all the labels on pkts and cans
Heinz and nestles products are ok, you are still fine on most bar of cadburys chocolates,, mrs crimbles products are gluten free,
bread the best I have found is Glutafin gluten free select seeded loaf slice
if he gets free prescription you can apply to get free products to be added to prescription http://www.glutafin.co.uk/Image/files/Prescription Request form 2.pdf
i would recommend to join Coeliac uk also there is a gluten free app where you can scan foods now with your phone to see if they ok to eat.
I'm a bit WTF reading some of these answers! A couple of years ago I went gluten free for ages without realising just because I wanted to get in better shape. It's a piece of piss and I don't think I could ever go back to a diet that revolved around bread and pasta.
It might take a bit of a brain and habit reset but once you do it you'll never look back. Everyone should try and eat less wheat, that's why more and more people are becoming intolerant. Tell your mate to check out the paleo diet as there's tonnes of books and info on t'internet and I'm pretty sure it's gluten free.
Correct me if I'm wrong but you can still eat vegetables, fruit, salad, meat, fish, eggs and nuts. What else do you need?
IMHO you'd have to be completely mental to base your diet on (expensive) special gluten-free versions of traditionally gluten based foods when you've got so much amazing healthy food available to you.
I'm a bit WTF reading some of these answers! A couple of years ago I went gluten free for ages without realising just because I wanted to get in better shape. It's a piece of piss and I don't think I could ever go back to a diet that revolved around bread and pasta.
It might take a bit of a brain and habit reset but once you do it you'll never look back. Everyone should try and eat less wheat, that's why more and more people are becoming intolerant. Tell your mate to check out the paleo diet as there's tonnes of books and info on t'internet and I'm pretty sure it's gluten free.
Correct me if I'm wrong but you can still eat vegetables, fruit, salad, meat, fish, eggs and nuts. What else do you need?
IMHO you'd have to be completely mental to base your diet on (expensive) special gluten-free versions of traditionally gluten based foods when you've got so much amazing healthy food available to you.
I think this is a very good answer.
Going gluten free should be able changing you're eating habits, not just eating the same foods just picking gluten free versions. Gluten free bread is crap unless you toast it anyway.
Porridge is gluten free I might add (generally with decent oats) so that's breakfast sorted.
For anyone that has cereal / toast for breakfast, a sandwich at lunchtime, and a pasta type evening meal regularly - it is tough to change. Rice is generally gluten free though (although some do enrich with corn starch so you need to check), so a good curry is still achievable….just no naan or popadoms!
I think you/Billy The Fish are oversimplifying matters. It doesn't matter to those that choose a gluten free diet if there is a bit of gluten in a sauce. For example normal Soy Sauce is not GF therefore a no go to Coeliacs, but not to those merely choosing a GF diet.
The proposal of meat, fish, eggs, veg, fruit, nuts is fine if you want a bland diet, but why should Coeliacs want anything different from non Coeliacs? I'm pretty fit, have a decent balanced diet, but occasionally like something on toast or a pizza/pasta.
And to correct a few of your inaccuracies:
1. Not all Gluten Free bread is crap. It definitely used to be, even a couple of years ago, but has come on leaps and bounds with likes of Genius/Warburtons/UDI. Admittedly not cheap, but not crap either.
2. Oats can get contaminated with gluten in the field. Whilst most Coeliacs can eat oats, not all.
3. You are also suggesting porridge 365 days a year?! Oh hang on, I bet you also suggest fruit/yoghurt on weekends for variety.
4. Rice is always gluten free. If it becomes processed then may I guess get contaminated.
5. Have not found a cornflour that is not GF i.e. not contaminated with wheat/barley/rye, but of course always check.
5. Poppadoms are made with gram flour which is GF (wheat/barley/rye relatively rare in Asian sub continent hence very few Coeliacs there) albeit best to check with restaurant/supplier to make sure.
5. Poppadoms are made with gram flour which is GF (wheat/barley/rye relatively rare in Asian sub continent hence very few Coeliacs there) albeit best to check with restaurant/supplier to make sure.