SensitiviTees prints colorful graphic apparel That Tells it Like it Is and Keeps it Fun with sensitivity messages; Gluten Free, Wheat Free, Milk Free, Dairy Free, Nut Free, Peanut Free & Food Allergies. Our whimsical artwork and colorful messages help others be more understanding about sensitive situations.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
How To Make Gluten Free Lemon Cross Drop Biscuits for Easter
A Lemon Cross Drop is a
dropped biscuit with lemon pudding on top. You will need a pastry bag with a
tip so you can draw a cross on each biscuit with the lemon pudding.
Substitutions: Use your
favorite sugar free sweetener in place of the 'white sugar' according to the
conversion on the substitute.
Serves: 12
Prep Time: 15
Total Time: 35
Ingredients
Bisquick Pancake and
Baking Mix Gluten-Free
2-1/2 cups
3/4 cup butter or
margarine
2 teaspoons white sugar
1 cup water
1 egg
prepared instant lemon
pudding
1/4 cup powdered sugar
Instructions
Prepare the lemon pudding
according to the package directions (instant is fine). Let set (at least 30
minutes) in the refrigerator.
Have the pastry bag and tip handy for after the biscuits cool.
While the pudding is chilling....
Preheat over to 425 degrees F (219 degrees C).
Cut the butter and baking mix until crumbly.
Beat the egg and sugar together until smooth (with a whisk).
Add egg mixture, water, and crumbs together and stir until well mixed
Drop onto lightly greased cookie sheet (about one tablespoon each biscuit).
Bake in preheated over until golden on edges (about 8-12 minutes).
Remove from the over and cool on rack.
While biscuits are slightly warm....
Using the pastry bag and tips, draw a cross on each biscuit with the lemon pudding.
Dust lightly with powdered sugar
Serve warm
OR
Refrigerate and serve chilled
Refrigerate all left overs
Have the pastry bag and tip handy for after the biscuits cool.
While the pudding is chilling....
Preheat over to 425 degrees F (219 degrees C).
Cut the butter and baking mix until crumbly.
Beat the egg and sugar together until smooth (with a whisk).
Add egg mixture, water, and crumbs together and stir until well mixed
Drop onto lightly greased cookie sheet (about one tablespoon each biscuit).
Bake in preheated over until golden on edges (about 8-12 minutes).
Remove from the over and cool on rack.
While biscuits are slightly warm....
Using the pastry bag and tips, draw a cross on each biscuit with the lemon pudding.
Dust lightly with powdered sugar
Serve warm
OR
Refrigerate and serve chilled
Refrigerate all left overs
Copyright © 2013, Squidoo, LLC and respective copyright owners
Image Credit: Daniel St.Pierre / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Friday, March 22, 2013
Gluten-Free and Kosher for Passover (Pesach)!
Readying a Gluten-Free Passover
Courtesy of CARLO WOLFF--CJN Staff
Reporter http://www.ClevelandJewishNews.com
Chandra Morgan-Henley is
going to her mother’s for Seder. Mom will make Morgan-Henley Gluten-Free Matzah
balls. “She’s wonderful,” said Morgan-Henley. “She’s the only mother I’ve got.”
So accommodating, too: Mom
is broadening her culinary perspective – as well she should, given that her
daughter is not only celiac, she’s in the celiac food business.
Part of what makes mom
wonderful is that a few years ago, she began to “dip her toe into cooking
gluten-free for me,” said Morgan-Henley, who runs Gluten Free Catering, a gluten-free baking company, out of her home
in Cleveland near the border of Lakewood, OH.
Morgan-Henley bakes
pastries and bread for people like her who cannot eat anything with wheat,
barley or rye. Oats, too, are forbidden unless they’re certified Gluten-Free.
Morgan-Henley swore off
grains altogether in 2006 after she wound up requiring transfusions of iron,
she said. She was already “mostly wheat-free, but that kicked me all the way to
gluten-free.
“I started baking because
I got tired of feeing deprived, and I started baking for other people because
they were tasting stuff I was baking and going, ‘Oh, my G-d, this is
wonderful,’” Morgan-Henley said. Over the past several years, she said, there
has been “a boom” in the availability of Gluten-Free foods; before, “a lot of
the products were pretty awful. There are probably 15 or 20 times as many
products available now as there were six, seven years ago.”
That may be because there
are many more people who need such products than was assumed even 20 years ago.
According to Cindy Koller
Kass, a Solon woman with high praise for Morgan-Henley’s baking, celiac,
technically known as celiac sprue, affects approximately one in 100 people. If
a celiac ingests a forbidden grain, the villi, projections from the intestines
that absorb nutrients, flop, so the nutrients never make it into the person’s
system.
“Depending on where in the
intestine the villi flatten out, you may have iron deficiency anemia, you may
develop osteoporosis; everybody’s different. If you’re female, you might have
miscarriages as a result of not absorbing nutrients. Because it affects
everybody differently, it’s hard to diagnose if you’re not looking for it,” said
Koller Kass, who discovered she was celiac about 20 years ago.
Koller Kass is president
of the Greater Cleveland CeliacAssociation, the local chapter of the Celiac Sprue Association of the United States.
There are 50 to 75 active
members in the support group, which meets monthly. The chapter has a mailing
list of 500 names.
Koller Kass discovered her
condition when her mother was about to enter a hospital for gall bladder
surgery and coincidentally, Koller Kass wasn’t feeling well herself. Her mother
suggested Koller Kass see the mother’s doctor, who diagnosed her as celiac. At
the time, the disease was so rare the doctor ordered another round of tests.
When the diagnosis was
affirmed, her mother’s doctor warned her that a Gluten-Free diet was “very
difficult to follow”; meanwhile, Koller Kass’ brother, who is also a doctor,
told her to adopt it immediately. At the time, she said, a Gluten-Free diet was
a challenge; no products were so labeled.
“I figured I would go out
to dinner one last time because I didn’t think I could go out to a restaurant
ever again because there’s flour in everything,” said Koller Kass, who attends
Park Synagogue. “My favorite food was Eggplant Parmigianino; I thought I would
miss that the most. So I went to an Italian restaurant, and as it turns out,
they did not bread their eggplant.”
After that meal, she
fasted for Yom Kippur, and then began the gluten-free diet. “Psychologically, I
cleansed my body for Yom Kippur and started the diet the next day.”
As for Passover (Pesach),
Koller Kass said “a Gluten-Free diet is a Passover diet all year long, minus
the Matzah.
“Matzah is the biggest
barrier to truly observing Passover,” she added. “For many years I had to make
Hillel sandwich with just the bitter herbs and charoses, but recently Yehuda came
out with a Gluten-Free Matzah-style cracker, which is actually very good. It
looks like regular Matzah, but because it does not have any wheat in it, it is
not technically Matzah; but it is Gluten-Free and kosher for Passover.”
Here is Morgan-Henley’s Passover “Matzah” recipe:
You will need about four
eggs and about a half-cup of vegetable oil; a pinch of onion powder; salt and
pepper to taste, and enough dried potato flakes to make it thick.
Beat the eggs and the oil
together until they emulsify, then sprinkle in some potato flakes and
seasonings. Keep stirring with the fork and sprinkling in the potato flakes
until there’s enough to form little balls.
Let it rest for five to 10
minutes, stir with the fork again; you can do it with bare hands if you want to
wash your hands with Dawn detergent afterwards.
Then form it into balls
the size of walnuts, drop it into boiling water, boil for 18 minutes with the
lid on, and there you have it.
Morgan-Henley has used
three kinds of gluten-free Matzah, all available at Unger’s on South
Taylor Road in Cleveland Heights , OH .
The first is Shmurah Matzah, made from certified
Gluten-Free oats, but expensive; the next is Yehuda Matzo squares, made mainly
from tapioca starch; the last is Manischewitz,
new to Unger’s this year; she wasn’t
sure how the Manischewitz would work
– it’s “sturdier” than the Yehuda,
she said – but she will be back for more.
This year, she’ll bring
her mother something new: gluten-free cake meal. “They make the Matzah and then
they grind it up to be made it into a cake. I bought a package for my mother so
she can make her sponge cake Gluten-Free.
“When I bake, you can’t
tell it’s Gluten-Free unless you see me eating it,” Morgan-Henley said, laughing.
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Our Latest Product Review... "WAHM Reviews SensitiviTees"
WAHM Reviews SensitiviTees
Posted by Ann Cowan on March 19, 2013 at 11:55 AM WAHM Reviewer - Traci Tamlyn
Posted by Ann Cowan on March 19, 2013 at 11:55 AM WAHM Reviewer - Traci Tamlyn
"SensitiviTees:
Specialty T-Shirts with Sensitive messages; Gluten-Free, Food Allergies, Gay
Marriages, Adoption, Breast Cancer Awareness.
When I was first
introduced to this product I was so excited! My son has a Dairy allergy and now
that he is mobile and independent, 3 years old, it is more difficult at large
gatherings to make sure he isn’t given something with Dairy in it. The t-shirt
I requested will help tremendously with this issue. It has a large cow on the
front and written underneath, in large print, it says Dairy Allergy. I was able
to base my size decision on measurements they provided for youth shirts. A
youth size would have been too large for my son so I ordered a toddler size.
After communicating with Stacy at SensitiviTees I received my package a week later. To my surprise the
package included the t-shirt I requested and a long sleeve shirt also.
I was very happy with the
quality of the shirts. The t-shirt is a thin material and will not be too heavy
for the summer months. The long sleeve shirt is a thicker material and prefect
for other seasons. Upon receiving the package I washed the shirts according to
the washing instructions provided. They washed up very well. They are made of
100% cotton and it is recommended to air dry them, which I did.
The first time my son wore
the t-shirt my family loved it! He was able to wear the long sleeve shirt to a
community event and we received many compliments for it. People were able to
ask questions about his dairy allergy and understand it better. I felt that he
was safer around people who do not know about his allergy, while wearing his
Dairy Allergy shirt.
You can find out more
about SensitiviTees on their Facebook page, blog page and webpage.”
I received one or more of
the products or services mentioned above for free in the hope that I would
mention it on my blog. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use
personally and believe will be good for my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance
with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the
Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.
"SensitiviTees:
Specialty T-Shirts with Sensitive messages; Gluten-Free, Food Allergies, Gay
Marriages, Adoption, Breast Cancer Awareness.
When I was first
introduced to this product I was so excited! My son has a Dairy allergy and now
that he is mobile and independent, 3 years old, it is more difficult at large
gatherings to make sure he isn’t given something with Dairy in it. The t-shirt
I requested will help tremendously with this issue. It has a large cow on the
front and written underneath, in large print, it says Dairy Allergy. I was able
to base my size decision on measurements they provided for youth shirts. A
youth size would have been too large for my son so I ordered a toddler size.
After communicating with Stacy at SensitiviTees I received my package a week later. To my surprise the
package included the t-shirt I requested and a long sleeve shirt also.
I was very happy with the
quality of the shirts. The t-shirt is a thin material and will not be too heavy
for the summer months. The long sleeve shirt is a thicker material and prefect
for other seasons. Upon receiving the package I washed the shirts according to
the washing instructions provided. They washed up very well. They are made of
100% cotton and it is recommended to air dry them, which I did.
The first time my son wore
the t-shirt my family loved it! He was able to wear the long sleeve shirt to a
community event and we received many compliments for it. People were able to
ask questions about his dairy allergy and understand it better. I felt that he
was safer around people who do not know about his allergy, while wearing his
Dairy Allergy shirt.
You can find out more
about SensitiviTees on their Facebook page, blog page and webpage.”
I received one or more of
the products or services mentioned above for free in the hope that I would
mention it on my blog. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use
personally and believe will be good for my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance
with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the
Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.
Thursday, March 14, 2013
How to Celebrate Pi (π) Day with a Gluten Free Pie Recipe
Gluten-Free & Dairy-Free Sweet Potato Pie |
Ingredients
- 4 large sweet potatoes, cooked, peeled and cooled
- 4 Tbsp. Earth Balance Vegan Butter Sticks, softened
- 3/4 cup brown sugar
- 2 tsp. honey
- 2 eggs, beaten
- 1 tsp. Simply Organic Cinnamon
- 1/2 tsp. Simply Organic Nutmeg
- 1/2 tsp. sea salt
- 1/8 tsp. Simply Organic All-Spice
- 1/4 cup dairy-free milk such as So Delicious
- 1 tsp. Simply Organic Almond Extract
- 1 9 inch gluten-free pie shell
Instructions
Preheat oven to 375
degrees F.
In a large bowl, beat
sweet potato flesh and butter until creamy. Stir in remaining filling
ingredients; mix until smooth.
Transfer mixture into
prepare pie shell.
Bake for 45 minutes or
until a knife inserted in the center comes out clean.
Set aside for 15 minutes
before serving.
Recipe
type: Dessert
Prep
time: 15 mins
Cook
time: 1 hour
Total
time: 1 hour 15 mins
Serves: 12
Notes
Serving
size: 1 slice Calories: 200 cal • Fat: 6.2 g • Protein: 3 g • Carb: 38.7 g
• Fiber: 2.8 g • Sugar: 26.1 g • Sodium: 237 mg
(courtesy
of the Healthy Apple)
Monday, March 11, 2013
Allergy-Free Main Dish Recipe: Mexican Chicken
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Friday, March 8, 2013
A Poem for International Women’s Day
(courtesy of www.anitapoems.com, writing poetry to help fight breast cancer)
Today is InternationalWomen’s Day and I would like to dedicate the following poem to my wife, mother,
sister, mother-in-law, cousins, aunts, friends, and all the women on earth.
I truly hope that this
poem helps bring awareness about women’s achievements and current struggles.
Overall, I’m also hoping that it will remind all the men out there about the
importance of all the women in their lives.
Women’s Day
It’s a time to celebrate,
all the women in our lives.
Our mothers and sisters,
daughters and wives.
all the women in our lives.
Our mothers and sisters,
daughters and wives.
We must remember,
to appreciate and respect.
With their beautiful hearts,
how our days they affect.
to appreciate and respect.
With their beautiful hearts,
how our days they affect.
Each woman is gentle,
caring and kind.We must respect,
caring and kind.We must respect,
both her body and mind.
Let’s acknowledge and celebrate,
all the things they achieve.
We encourage each one,
when we support and believe.
all the things they achieve.
We encourage each one,
when we support and believe.
To their hardships and struggles,
we must open our eyes.
Act with compassion,
when we hear all their cries.
we must open our eyes.
Act with compassion,
when we hear all their cries.
We must always love them,
and genuinely show.
This is the key,
for our relationships to grow.
and genuinely show.
This is the key,
for our relationships to grow.
The celebration begins,
when we are aware.
Our feelings and love,
every day we must share.
when we are aware.
Our feelings and love,
every day we must share.
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
The National Foundation for Celiac Awareness (NFCA) is running a Gluten-Free Spring Recipe Contest (deadline: March 29, 2013)
Submit your original gluten-free recipe in the
Spring Gluten-Free Recipe Contest for the chance to win $100
worth of products from the Gluten-Free Choices line.
To give you some
inspiration, the NFCA will highlight products from each brand in the
Gluten-Free Choices line throughout March. After the contest is over, they will
pick some of their favorite recipes (including the winners) and publish them in
an e-cookbook that you can
download for free.
How to Enter
Submit an original
gluten-free recipe through this online
form or by e-mail to contest@celiaccentral.org.
All entries must be received by Friday, March 29,
2013
Entries must include:
►Your contact information
(Full name and phone number)
►Title of recipe
►Recipe Category (Entrée/Side
Dish or Baking)
►Ingredients
►Directions
►Number of servings
►Prep time and cook time
preferred, but not required
Prizes
Grand Prize: Gluten-Free Prize Pack
One lucky winner will be
chosen from each Recipe Category to receive a gluten-free prize pack from
Gluten-Free Choices ($100 value).
e-Cookbook Raffle Winner
One lucky winner who signs
up to receive the e-Cookbook will win a gluten-free goodies from the
Gluten-Free Choices brand!
© 2013 National Foundation for
Celiac Awareness. All rights reserved.
Monday, March 4, 2013
Delicious Nutrition in any Language
The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics has designated
March as National Nutrition Month®. Recognizing our country’s rich cultural
diversity, the Academy has initiated “Eat Right, Your Way, Every Day” to help
Americans of all cultures make delicious, nutritious choices about what to eat
from their homeland cuisines.
Eating well to
boost your health and maintain a healthy weight starts with some smart,
conscious choices, including cutting out white flour and white sugar and
curtailing your intake of saturated fats. The Dietary Guidelines for Americans
offer these recommendations for a healthy eating plan:
- Emphasize fruit, vegetables, whole
grains, and, if you consume dairy, choose low-fat or fat-free milk and
milk products.*
- Include lean meats, poultry, and fish
if you eat meat; everyone should include legumes (beans, nuts), and eggs (if
you are not vegan or are an ovo-lacto vegetarian).
- Avoid or limit your consumption of
saturated fats, trans fats, cholesterol, and added sugars. Check the Nutrition
Facts panel on food labels for total fat and saturated fat.
Regardless of your
cultural heritage, there are so many ways to pack in the nutrition without
packing on pounds (of course, we expect you are exercising and staying active!).
Make every calorie count. Eating well goes
beyond counting calories—it means eating nutritiously in terms of vitamins,
minerals, fiber and other nutrients. Choose whole grains, unprocessed or
minimally processed foods, natural or certified organic foods; include plenty
of fruits and vegetables every day.
Mix it up. Vary your menu to encourage sampling and
broadening the types of foods kids are more apt to try. Protein is available in
meat, beans, and nuts; many different fruits offer wholesome fiber and
vitamins; try side dishes made with whole grains, fruits, nuts, or vegetables.
Make it colorful. Fruits and vegetables come in a
rainbow of colors, each overflowing with essential vitamins and minerals such
as Vitamins A and C, calcium, phosphorous, magnesium, and many more. Dark leafy
vegetables are nutritional powerhouses.
Keep it fresh whenever possible. Fresh fruits and
vegetables pack more nutritional punch than processed, canned, or frozen foods.
Americans are lucky
to be able to enjoy so many wonderful ethnic cuisines within our borders. Here
is a small list of delicious ethnic dishes that support the guidelines for good
nutrition:
Italian –
minestrone soup bursting with vegetables, beans, and pasta; gnocchi (made with
potato flour); homemade tomato sauce; whole wheat pasta with vegetables and
olive oil.
Greek – tzaziki
sauce (made with low-fat yogurt, garlic, and dill) served as a dip with fresh
vegetables; dolmas, the stuffed grape leaves filled with ground meat and/or
rice, vegetables, dried fruit, pine nuts.
Chinese – stir
fries made with fresh vegetables (bok choy, snow peas, carrots, bean sprouts),
and tofu, chicken or lean beef.
Japanese – udon
noodle soup with buckwheat noodles, bean sprouts, snow peas, tofu.
Central/Latin
American –sliced, grated, or chopped jicama (root vegetable) used in salads;
homemade salsas with tomatoes and chiles (as dips and toppings); quinoa, a versatile
grain that cooks quickly, can be used as a side dish or in salads
(gluten-free!); sliced avocados; fish stew.
Caribbean – grilled
pineapple; mangos and other tropical fruits; Cuban black beans; curried sweet
potato soup.
African – pumpkin
puree, pumpkin-nut soup; rice with beef and beans; African vegetable soup with
sweet potato, garbanzos, and vegetables; couscous with vegetables.
Indian – fruit
chutneys, whole wheat naan, dal (lentils and seasonings), tandoori chicken.
Eastern European –
beets, buckwheat, egg noodles, stuffed cabbage (with lean ground meat or pureed
steamed vegetables).
Bon apetit, buen
provecho, guten Apetit . . . enjoy!
*There are many
excellent dairy alternatives for those who wish to avoid dairy products, such
as soy, coconut, almond, hemp, and rice milks, and frozen desserts and cheeses
made from these products.
Friday, March 1, 2013
You’re Eating Toxic Chemicals, Even If You Eat Organic And Avoid Plastic
A new study found remarkable levels of endocrine disruptors in even carefully catered diets.
You do everything right. You eat your organic produce, free-range meat and eggs, and hormone-free milk. You studiously avoid plastic containers that could leach Bisphenol A (BPA), a possibly toxic estrogen-mimicking compound. Does it matter? A new study indicates that it does--but only to a point. In fact, you could eat an organic, local diet without any plastic exposure and still end up with high levels of toxic chemicals in your body.
Dr. Sheela Sathyanarayana, a pediatrician focused on endocrine-disrupting chemicals and health impacts at the Seattle Children’s Research Institute, noticed that her patients often asked how they could reduce exposure to endocrine disruptors at home. So she and her colleagues set up a study to test the efficacy of a written recommendation versus a five-day catered diet to see which (if either) would reduce exposure to BPA and pthalates, a group of chemicals used in plastics that have been linked to cancer, birth defects, and more. The results, published this week in the Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology, were somewhat shocking.
Sathyanarayana’s study consisted of 10 families. One group of random participants was given written guidelines from the national Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit on avoiding BPA and pthalates in daily life (i.e. avoid canned foods when possible). The other group was given catered food and drink from a local company that offers organic, fresh, and local items. Both groups were asked to drink filtered water and avoid plastic drink containers. "People tend to focus on the organic part of it, but it was also fresh foods when possible, and no plastic used in cooking, preparation, or storage of foods," she explains.
The researchers assumed that urinary BPA and pthalate levels would drop in the catered group compared to the group using written instructions--people are generally bad at following advice from their doctors after all. "Instead we saw big spikes and increases in the catered diet group and no changes at all in the written education group," she says.
Sathyanarayana’s team tested the food samples in the catered group to find the source of contamination. The culprits: milk, cream, ground coriander, and other spices. "I honestly don’t know why the spices were more contaminated or why the dairy had higher contamination, but I do know it’s consistent with other reports," she says. In general spices, high fat dairy, and animal fats tend to have higher phthalate concentrations--but not at the levels reported in Sathyanarayana’s study.
What happened? Remember: That milk came from local farms in glass containers. And the coriander and other spices, while not local (many aren’t produced in the
Nonetheless, Sathyanarayana stresses that this doesn’t mean chemical exposure is out of our hands. "We do have national studies that [look at] general population exposures, and they don’t see concentrations this high. Other food studies don’t document concentrations in food this high either," she says. "It was a fluke in the sense that we happened to have a catered diet with several spices and dairy with higher concentrations."
It’s not like going vegan would have solved the problem. The kids in the study had higher phthalate concentrations, possibly because the caterer gave the families snacks (bread, cheese, etc.) that they turned into grilled cheese. "But even without the dairy, we still wouldn’t have seen results we’d hope to see," says Sathyanarayana.
The authors conclude in their study: "It may be that our findings reflect an isolated rare contamination event because of unusual processing or a packaging abnormality. It also could be the case that the food supply is systematically contaminated with high phthalate concentrations, which are difficult to identify."
Sathyanarayana isn’t planning to dig deeper in the supply chain to figure out where the chemicals came from--that falls outside her research interests, though she hopes that advocacy groups will pursue the issue.
There are still ways to reduce BPA and phthalate exposure, despite what the study’s results indicate. Sathyanarayana recommends a fresh food diet with reduced animal fat and canned food intake. "Diet can really contribute to your chemical exposure," she says.
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