Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):
  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Bread


momothree

Recommended Posts

momothree Apprentice

Okay, so we have been on the gluten-free diet for all of 3 days, and it already feels like forever. The dinners are fairly easy to manage, but there is a gap where bread and crackers used to be. Perhaps someone can offer up some brand names or a bread machine recipe that tastes close to the real thing?? I'm new to this, so perhaps there is no such thing. All I know is that I have purchased a few bread items and crackers (gag) and baked a couple of things (biscuits etc.), and they are tough to choke down. Will we get used to it??? I should mention that I am in Canada, so I may not be able to access some of the brands available in the US. There was a reply to one of my other posts from Cassidy that said they were basically not eating bread and not missing it. Is this what a lot of people end up doing? All I know is that with 3 kids and a dog, sometimes all I have time to do is throw together a grilled cheese sandwich for one of my starving kids :lol: Any other hints or tips anyone has to offer for time saving (sanity saving) techniques would definitely be welcome. Thanks!


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Mango04 Enthusiast

You might want to try Kinnikinick and Glutino. The Glutino cinnamon raison bread is pretty good. Make sure all gluten-free bread is toasted before you eat it.

You might also want to try Cause Your Special mixes. I've found them all to be pretty good.

I don't eat bread anymore either....and I don't miss it at all :) I've just lost my taste for it I think (and I used to be a bread addict :) ) A lot of people buy the substitutes though and like them. It's just a matter of finding what you like and learning to bake a little differently. You'll get the hang of it. There's plenty of awesome food we can eat.

JenAnderson Rookie

Hi my name's Jennifer and I used to be a bread eater.. :ph34r:

I still like bread, but it's harder to find one that tasted like the "old" stuff. I've tried the Ener-G kinds and quite frankly they tasted like cardboard. I tried the Food for Life ones and they were too small. I like sandwiches, not appetizers. The one that I have found since being in Maryland was Bob's Red Mill Bread Mix. It's good and the size depends on what size loaf pan you have. You need a Kitchenaid mixer to really make it taste good. (I don't know why, but it tasted better that way) The one real problem I found was that the bread would get moldy in two to three days. I froze them after finding this out, but I hate having to thaw bread at the last minute. It's good though, I would highly recommend it if you have to have bread. I have some on hand but only make it when I need a bread fix.

Guhlia Rising Star

Hi. If I were you I would get myself a copy of the Incredible Edible Gluten Free food for Kids. It has amazing bread recipes including a to-die-for banana bread recipe AND a white bread recipe. There's also a graham cracker recipe (which I haven't tried yet, but it looks good). Every single thing that I've made from this book has been outstanding! I highly, highly, highly recommend it, especially for kids. My hubby says he can't tell the difference AT ALL between my "special" food and his "normal" food now that I started using this book. There are recipes for chicken nuggets, pizza, bread, cookies, cakes (birthday staple), pies, etc. It's well worth the money.

Felidae Enthusiast

Honestly it is trial and error because what one person loves another does not. I do not like Kinnikinnick breads but I love their bagels, pizza crusts, and cookies. I find Glutino breads and pizza crusts disgusting. The EnerG breads are okay, kind of like Wonderbread but not as soft.

I have replaced bread with soft corn tortillas, tortilla chips, rice cakes, rice crackers, corn thins, and EnerG crackers. Yes, you will get used to it. As time goes by it'll get easier. I am also in Canada and there are a few of us kicking around here.

tammy Community Regular

Personally, we have found that if both my husband and I like something its worth mentioning. So I will mention Pamela's Ultimate Baking and Pancake Mix. It makes the best biscuits and pancakes! I use this mix for my biscuits at Thanksgiving!

Jeanne Newbie
Okay, so we have been on the gluten-free diet for all of 3 days, and it already feels like forever. The dinners are fairly easy to manage, but there is a gap where bread and crackers used to be. Perhaps someone can offer up some brand names or a bread machine recipe that tastes close to the real thing?? I'm new to this, so perhaps there is no such thing. All I know is that I have purchased a few bread items and crackers (gag) and baked a couple of things (biscuits etc.), and they are tough to choke down. Will we get used to it??? I should mention that I am in Canada, so I may not be able to access some of the brands available in the US. There was a reply to one of my other posts from Cassidy that said they were basically not eating bread and not missing it. Is this what a lot of people end up doing? All I know is that with 3 kids and a dog, sometimes all I have time to do is throw together a grilled cheese sandwich for one of my starving kids :lol: Any other hints or tips anyone has to offer for time saving (sanity saving) techniques would definitely be welcome. Thanks!

Hi. When my son was first diagnosed, we went through 15 different brands of gluten-free bread, before we found "THE BREAD", and he has stuck with it ever since. It is made by Sterk's Bakery - which I believe is in Canada - just over the border. I do believe that they have a website. Makes fantastic grilled cheese sandwiches, and in fact, I have served it to his friends and they have not really known the difference.

Also, Gluten Free 1-2-3 mixes make really good muffins. Hope that helps. If you need help finding Sterk's, just email me back and I can forward informaiton to you.

Jeanne Simkins


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



momothree Apprentice

Wow! Thanks for all of your advice and input--I'm actually feeling hopeful that, with some trial and error, we might acutally hit on something palatable. I just printed off the whole post so now, it's time for some research. :)

skinnyminny Enthusiast

The Gluten Free Pantry makes the BEST mix in my opinon its so far the best I have tried, we make a loaf a week we slice it with an electric knief and store it in the frig to keep it from molding, and its great toasted or for a cold sandwhich, we use the bread machine to make it but there are oven directions also on the package, we get it at Wild Oats.

mrsnj91 Explorer

We have tried millet bread, GFP fav. sandwich bread mix, whole foods fresh baked bread and EnerG tapioca bread. The millet bread and the EnerG tap. bread toast nice but I didn't like the millet bread much as it can be a bit grainy. The GFP sandwich bread mix made a great cinn. bread but I didn't care for it as a sandwhich bread as it was really heavy. Same with the WF bread. I put that on toast 3 times and it never toasted!!! LOL! And it kinda gets soggy. SO I think if I had to pick I would do the EnerG tapioca bread and the GFP mix for the cinn. bread (which was really good)

Oh and we freeze too.

Green12 Enthusiast

I agree that it is a trial and error process to find what your family likes best, it is all about personal taste and preference. You can maybe try a couple different products per week, or month, however you want to do it, to find your favorites and then those become your staples in your pantry.

I have replaced bread with potatoes, sweet potatoes, winter squashes, legumes, and rice. I also like the Food For Life Rice Tortillas to make sandwich wraps, burritos, or quesadillas.

swittenauer Enthusiast

The only bread we have found that was any good at all was fromWhole Foods. My husband still won't use it for a sandwich. We make garlic or cheesy bread to go with our gluten free pasta & it is awesome for that use.

Guinevere Newbie

I have tried all kinds. my personal favorite is the whole foods bakery brand - the one with sun dried tomatoes and garlic - the other is just okay. it makes fantastic toast and anything else you want to use it for. they also have pizza crust that is to die for. i use it as a dipping bread for when we have pasta (brown rice pasta in my experience is the best - trader joes has a great one), i must confess, i have never made pizza with it though (lactose intolerant). they also have great cookies - taste exactly like wheat - caution though, you will want to eat them all and they're expensive. they also have pies, cornbread, brownies, and carrot & banana bread. i can't do the sweets right now because of candidas, but they're really, really good.

i hope you have a whole foods around you, it would be worth the drive if you had to go a distance. buy some for the freezer.

!!

jerseyangel Proficient

My favorite so far is The Gluten Free Pantry French Bread Mix. I mix it up in my Kitchenaid and use water instead of milk. It's dairy free that way, and unlike a lot of breads, has no tapioca, which I am sensitive to. It tastes (and smells) really good! I bake it, slice it and store it in the refrigerator.

jaten Enthusiast
Personally, we have found that if both my husband and I like something its worth mentioning. So I will mention Pamela's Ultimate Baking and Pancake Mix. It makes the best biscuits and pancakes! I use this mix for my biscuits at Thanksgiving!

Do you follow the recipe exactly or make adjustments? I found that the biscuits have a great taste, but positively, absolutely fall to pieces.

My favorite so far is The Gluten Free Pantry French Bread Mix. I mix it up in my Kitchenaid and use water instead of milk. It's dairy free that way, and unlike a lot of breads, has no tapioca, which I am sensitive to. It tastes (and smells) really good! I bake it, slice it and store it in the refrigerator.

My dh just picked up one of these mixes for the first time yesterday. Do you use it for regular bread? We have 1 GFP french bread mix. What do you suggest?

jerseyangel Proficient

Jaten--I keep it sliced in the refrigerator, and use it for toast, sandwiches--anything, really. It's excellent toasted, and even untoasted, it holds together better than others I've tried. It has a nice crust, and the inside is very "normal breadlike". I don't know how it would be if you used the milk--probably denser? One thing I learned making these is to make sure you bake it until it sounds hollow when you tap it on the top--I ended up leaving it in the oven for 5 extra minutes to insure it was done all the way through. Good luck with your mix--I hope you enjoy it :)

Guhlia Rising Star

No problem, Momofthree! I hope your family enjoys the recipes as much as mine does. I've been ordering my flours at Open Original Shared Link. They seem to have the best prices and flat rate $10 shipping. If you make the garlic biscuits, try adding shredded cheddar cheese to them (if you guys can have dairy). It makes them taste almost exactly like Red Lobster's cheddar bay biscuits. They're wonderful like that. :) I have to make a batch every few days because my non-gluten-free hubby can't get enough of them.

lpellegr Collaborator

A suggestion for crackers - I don't miss bread, but when you want something crunchy or want to spread some cheese or peanut butter you need crackers! There are rice crackers around, usually on the shelf with the Asian foods, but I'm not sure all of them are safe so read the labels to make sure they don't include soy sauce or anything iffy. Nut Thins are the absolute best gluten-free cracker out there and you can sometimes find them in a regular grocery store! They are not made in a dedicated gluten-free facility, so if you are very sensitive to cross-contamination you should take that into consideration, but so far I've not had any problems. I have also learned to make homemade crackers that are kind of like Wheat Thins, but I haven't found any substitute for Ritz or saltines. Some of the online sites carry crackers that claim to be "just like Ritz" so if you have a casserole that's just not the same without the crushed Ritz on top and you don't mind the expense you could find a substitute. I also found Glutano crackers online in small packages so you can carry them with you when traveling - they are not saltines, but not too far from it and are nice for tuna or peanut butter. I wish I could remember which online site had them - do a search or go to the Gluten-free Mall and you might find them.

jaten Enthusiast
I have also learned to make homemade crackers that are kind of like Wheat Thins....

Wheat Thins???? You have a recipe similar to Wheat Thins???? That was my favorite cracker pre-gluten-free....The Wheat Thin display is the only place in the grocery that I still stumble and salivate.

Please share!

TCA Contributor

I like the Sesmark Sesame Rice crackers. I get them at Target. They are not made in a gluten-free facility, but i haven't had any problems. They are really good. I also use a lot of corn chips as a substitute. It's a lot cheaper than other alternatives and tasty too! My favorite mix, and I've tried a lot, is Cause you're special. It actually tastes like bread!

mrsnj91 Explorer

Patti- YOu use the GFP french bread as a sandwich bread? It works? It is lighter than the actually sandwich bread? Hummm might try it.

Has anyone tried Glutino Corn bread? I bought it to try thinking it was a corn bread but is looks just like a white bread just made with corn. It smells good though. Haven't tried it yet.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Join eNewsletter
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - knitty kitty replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      12

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    2. - catnapt replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      12

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    3. - knitty kitty replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      12

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    4. - catnapt replied to catnapt's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      12

      results from 13 day gluten challenge - does this mean I can't have celiac?

    5. - Wheatwacked replied to Jane02's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      13

      Desperately need a vitamin D supplement. I've reacted to most brands I've tried.

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      133,368
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Helen1984
    Newest Member
    Helen1984
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.6k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • knitty kitty
      @catnapt,  I apologize.  Obviously I've confused you with someone else.  I have vision problems due to undiagnosed Celiac complications.  Being legally blind, y'all look the same from here.   You still have not said which new medication you started taking.  Parathyroid disorders can affect antibody production.  Bone Loss Correlated with Parathyroid Hormone Levels in Adult Celiac Patients https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36619734/ Effect of vitamin B1 supplementation on bone turnover markers in adults: an exploratory single-arm pilot study https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12075007/
    • catnapt
      during the gluten challenge I did not consume any wheat germ   the wheat germ is TOASTED - it's the only way it is sold now afiak doesn't matter I consume vast amounts of lectin containing foods PROPERLY prepared and have for well over a decade. They do not bother me in the least.    no anemia however the endo who ordered the celiac panel is the one who suggested the 2 week gluten challenge of eating at least 2 slices of bread per day or a serving of pasta- ALSO put me on a new drug at the same time (not a good idea)  I ate 4 slices because they were thin, or 2 English muffins, and just once some lasagna that someone else made since I stopped eating wheat pasta years ago. The English muffins caused some of the worst symptoms but that pc of lasagna almost killed me ( not literally but the pain was extreme) during those 12 days there were at least 3 times I considered going to Urgent Care.   This entire process was a waste of time TBH due to being on that new drug at the exact same time. it is impossible to tell if the drug I am taking for the possible renal calcium leak is working or not- given the dramatic response to the gluten challenge and resulting nausea (no vomiting) and eventually a loss of appetite and lower intake of foods so now I have a dangerously low potassium level   I don't have a simple case of celiac or no- I have an extremely complicated case with multiple variables I am seeing an endocrinologist for a problem with the calcium sensing glands - that system is very complicated and she has been unable to give me a firm diagnosis after many tests with confusing and often alarming results. She also appears to be inexperienced and unsure of herself. but I don't have the luxury of finding a new endo due to multiple issues of insurance, lack of drs in my area, money and transportation. so I'm stuck with her At least she hasn't given up    in any case I can assure you that lectins are not and never were the problem. I know they are a favorite villain in some circles to point to, but I have ZERO symptoms from my NORMAL diet which DOES NOT contain gluten. The longer I went without bread or foods with wheat like raisin bran cereal, the better I have felt. my body had been telling me for several years that wheat was the problem- or maybe specifically gluten, that remains to be seen- and stopping eating it was the best thing I could have done   I almost had unnecessary MAJOR SURGERY due to joint pain that I ONLY have if I am eating bread or related products I assumed it was the refined grains - never really suspected gluten but it does not matter I won't put that poison in my body ever again not that it is literally poison but it is def toxic to me        
    • knitty kitty
      @catnapt,  I'm sorry you're having such a rough time.   How much wheat germ and how much gluten were you eating? Lectins in beans can be broken down by pressure cooking them.  Do you pressure cook your beans?  Were you pressure cooking your wheat germ? What drugs are you taking?  Some immunosuppressive drugs affect IgA production.  Do you have anemia?
    • catnapt
      oops my gluten challenge was only 12 days It started Jan 21s and ended Feb 1st   worst 12 days of my life   Does not help that I also started on a thiazide-like drug for rule in/out renal calcium leak at the exact same time No clue if that could have been symptoms worse 🤔
    • Wheatwacked
      Welcome to the forum @Known1, What reaction were you expecting? Pipingrock.com High Potency Vitamin D3, 2000 IU, 250 Quick Release Softgels $6.89 I've have been taking the 10,000 IU for close to 10 years. When I started with vitamin D I worked my way up to 10000 over several weeks.  Even at 8000 I felt no noticeable difference.  Then after a few days at 10000 it hit Whoa, sunshine in a bottle.  celiac disease causes malabsorption of dietary D and you've poor UV access.  It took me from 2015 to 2019 to get my 25(OH)D just to 47 ng/ml.  Another two years to get to 80.  70 to 100 ng/ml seems to be the body's natural upper homeostasis  based on lifeguard studies.  Dr. Holick has observed the average lifeguard population usually has a vitamin D 3 level of around 100 ng/ml. Could it be that our normal range is too low given the fact that ¾ or more of the American population is vitamin D deficient? Your Calcium will increase with the vitamin D so don't supplement calcium unless you really need it.  Monitor with PTH  and 25(OH)D tests. Because of your Marsh 3 damage you need to ingest way more than the RDA of any supplement to undo your specific deficiencies. I believe you are in the goiter belt.  Unless you have reason not to, I recommend pipingrock's Liquid Iodine for price and quality.  The RDA is 150 to 1100 mcg.  In Japan the safe upper level is set at 3000 mcg.  Start with one drop 50 mcg to test for adverse response and build up.  I found 600 mcg (12 drops) a day is helping repair my body.  Iodine is necessary to healing.  90% of daily iodine intake is excreted in urine.  A Urine Iodine Concentration (UIC) can tell how much Iodine you got that day.  The thyroid TSH test will not show iodine deficiency unless it is really bad.  
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.