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Chaff

Advanced Members
  • Posts

    109
  • Joined

  • Last visited

1 Follower

  • DucksnPucks

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Female
  • Interests
    Chinese history, ultra-running, East Asian languages, knitting, fiction-writing, eating wheat (just kidding)
  • Location
    Okinawa, Japan

Chaff's Achievements

  1. Hi Dilettantsteph -- thanks for your reply. I should clarify that I'm not posting here on this for me. I'm posting this because a lot of folks online are suggesting just washing the beans to magically remove the gluten, while Jane Anderson is saying that trace amounts may remain. I just want to point that out in case there are other sensitive folks like...
  2. For what it's worth, I suggest getting a gluten-free testing kit and checking to see if your beans are safe after washing. It's the only way to be sure. Jane Anderson at About.com claims that washing (soap or no) does not really remove the gluten: http://celiacdisease.about.com/od/Gluten-Free-Grains/fl/Gluten-Free-Beans.htm I'm inclined to agree...
  3. Symptoms from gluten can take a while to leave your system, you could also have other food intolerances or conditions. SIBO is one associated with leaky gut, which comes from intestinal damage from celiac. So many possibilities. The only sure way to know is to take all this to your doctor and get some testing done.
  4. I made rice crackers from cream of rice baby cereal, olive oil, and water. It's surprising edible!

  5. I'm a 35-year-old woman with hereditary hemochromatosis. I'm supposed to have zero problems til menopause, but in my 20s I had severe iron overload. After the bloodlettings, things went along OK. But now I'm diagnosed celiac and gluten-free...and my celiac anemia tendencies are removed, allowing the iron free rein in my system. It's running in my system...
  6. Yours may be better than mine, of course.
  7. I tried Celiact this week. For two and a half days only -- and then I had to stop. It seemed like a great idea. It has a ton of stuff in it, all of which I was taking separately and some of which I had on order and didn't have access to. I don't have anywhere to buy gluten-free vitamins, since I live in Japan and they aren't very gluten-free-friendly...
  8. Just had my first Larabar!!

  9. 5 wks in: still C and blotating BUT BRAIN FOG IS GONE. Wow. So this is what living feels like.

    1. Chaff

      Chaff

      Ha! "Blotating."

  10. Chaff

    Cheese Requiem

    I've lost cheese! I put two and two together and am now on a two-week casein elimination diet. HOLY COW. It's day 4. (On day 2, my rennet arrived in the mail. It was a sad day.) I just made a dinner for my husband and me that took an army of hands. There was my gluten-free pasta, his gluten-ful pasta, my homemade meatballs with fennel seeds...
  11. No, there are a million of these, aren't there? But thanks for the tip -- I'll steer clear of that one!
  12. Rats. Now I have to do a casein challenge. There go my cookies for two weeks. :(

  13. My first gluten-free toast with olive-oil "butter"! IT TASTES LIKE REAL FOOD. =)

  14. I never realized english muffin crumbs were scary before. Now I just hear ominous music when I see them on the counter.

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