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New Post! Aug 15, 2007 @ 21:03:51#1
craftewoman

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35/NA/mesa,
Join Date: Aug 2007

I'm new to this. I'm not sure if I'm allergic to wheat or if I have celiac disease. I do plan to get tested next week. However I do know that when I eliminate wheat from my diet that I no longer have hives. My question is to those of you who have been living with this for years. Is your life signifigantly different? I feel as though I have to be paranoid about everything I eat now in case it has some hidden ingredients. I am a breadaholic. I am famous for my homemade whole wheat bread, and I was making EVERYTHING with fresh ground whole wheat, because that's supposed to be the healthy way right?
I just made my first loaf of gluten free bread. It tastes good, but , it's a lot like white bread. And can you use the gluten free flour to make everything and just substitute it for the wheat flour? Or are there other adjustments that need to be made to the recipe?

craftewoman last visited August 24, 2007
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New Post! Aug 15, 2007 @ 22:03:46#2
lili

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26/F/Beaverton, Oregon
Join Date: Apr 2005

Gluten free flour is gonna be different than regular bread. It usually makes a denser bread, sometimes a little sticky or gummy depending on the brand you're using. I found when trying to be on a wheat free diet, it's best to avoid packaged food altogether. It's just much simpler that way. I found it makes it harder on yourself than it needs to be if you spend too much effort trying to find imitations of foods you're not supposed to eat. It makes it harder because eating foods that are always never quite "right" is a constant reminder of what you wish you could be eating but can't. One exception is one specific brand of rice noodles that are nearly identical to wheat noodles called Pasta Joy.
Overall, I found being on a whole foods diet was the easiest way to eliminate wheat from my diet without feeling deprived.


lili last visited <font color=#990033>19 minutes ago </font>
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New Post! Apr 30, 2008 @ 02:53:03#3
yuliko

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24/F/Melbourne, Australia
Join Date: Apr 2008

Our Health food shops have a great variety of wheat free/gluten free breads, I find that SPelt breads are wuite beautiful, much more dense and they fill me up. Maybe buy them and see what you like, and then buy ingredients for them and make it yourself after?

yuliko last visited May 14, 2008
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New Post! May 05, 2008 @ 19:01:24#4
signurse1

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39/F/Olympia, Washington
Join Date: May 2008

Spelt has gluten. No one with Celiac Disease should eat spelt.

signurse1 last visited May 05, 2008
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New Post! Jun 05, 2008 @ 21:06:13#5
boots06

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55 points


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35/F/,
Join Date: Jun 2008

craftewoman said:
I'm new to this. I'm not sure if I'm allergic to wheat or if I have celiac disease. I do plan to get tested next week. However I do know that when I eliminate wheat from my diet that I no longer have hives. My question is to those of you who have been living with this for years. Is your life signifigantly different? I feel as though I have to be paranoid about everything I eat now in case it has some hidden ingredients. I am a breadaholic. I am famous for my homemade whole wheat bread, and I was making EVERYTHING with fresh ground whole wheat, because that's supposed to be the healthy way right?
I just made my first loaf of gluten free bread. It tastes good, but , it's a lot like white bread. And can you use the gluten free flour to make everything and just substitute it for the wheat flour? Or are there other adjustments that need to be made to the recipe?


Oh the dread of it all . I was recently diagnosed with celiac disease among other immune problems that I have had on going for the past many years. I thought the idea of leaving the bread world behind would be a killer. But I can honestly tell you I am feeling 100% better than I was, I have quit all sugars, all corn syrup, all honeys, and combined with no breads, I am also doing no grains, rices, bananas, oranges, apples or pears. Nothing that grows below the ground except onions and garlic.
The one thing they all have is amylose, and to help my health I have gone on a non-amylose diet.
There are actually foods which you can eat daily, and to top it off I really haven't had a problem finding stuff to eat when we go out to eat.
I do become sick if I eat any of these items now, and my body is the first to let me know..

Good luck to you -- but you can do it !! Oh yea in a little over 4 weeks I have also lost 21#...


If a dog barks in the woods and no one hears him - is he still a bad doggie ?
New discussion forum for Compromised Immune Systems
boots06 last visited June 07, 2008
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