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

Holiday Party


dragonmom

Recommended Posts

dragonmom Apprentice

Having a Christmas party, I am attempting to make it gluten free. Popular item is cocktailweenies wrapped in like biscuit dough. Has anyone ever attempted to make that gluten-free?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



tarnalberry Community Regular

lol! no way! someone coming to my work holiday party (hosted at my house) is bringing pigs in a blanket (I doubt they'll be gluten-free), and I was commenting today that I had never heard of such a thing being a holiday party appetizer! whatdayaknow!?! :D:lol::P

FeedIndy Contributor

I make mine with cheese-filled sausages, but I haven't yet found a way to convert them for DD. I'd be very interested in hearing if there is a dough that works as many signs are pointing to the rest of going gluten free very soon!

Sweetfudge Community Regular

mmm, i miss piggies! my mom always made them with cheese in the middle! i think looking on the forum for a bisquick-like recipe would do...i dunno! i'd love to hear how it goes though!

Fiddle-Faddle Community Regular

pancake batter? Or maybe just wrap the piggies in a pancake and secure with a toothpick? ("If You Give A Pig A Pancake...")

Jennas-auntie Apprentice
mmm, i miss piggies! my mom always made them with cheese in the middle! i think looking on the forum for a bisquick-like recipe would do...i dunno! i'd love to hear how it goes though!

There is a recipe for Phyllo dough in Rebecca Reilly

dragonmom Apprentice

Thanks for the suggestions, I have some Bob's bisquit dough- or maybe the frozen pizza dough .....will keep trying. I think the pancake pigs sounded really...good :blink:


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Fiddle-Faddle Community Regular

Man, I miss baklava!!!! Tell us how it turns out (drool)!!!!

lonewolf Collaborator

I have made hotdogs wrapped in gluten-free biscuit dough. They turned out okay - the biggest problem was that the dogs shrunk and the wrapping didn't. Might be easier with cocktail weinies. Here's what I used for the dough.

2 C gluten-free Flour*

1/2 C Butter (I use salted butter - if you use shortening add 1/2 tsp. of salt)

1 Tbs. Baking powder

3/4 C Milk

Sift flour and baking powder together. Cut butter into flour using pastry blender. Make sure the butter is very well mixed in! Add milk and stir until dough forms a ball. Depending on the humidity, you might need a little more, but be careful not to get it too sticky. Roll out to desired thickness (about 3/8", I think is what I did) on a clean "flour sack" type towel, (NOT terry cloth) well floured with rice flour. Cut into desired size and wrap around the dogs.

(You can also mix in some grated cheese and even garlic powder!)

*Flour mix I use:

3 C Brown Rice Flour

1 C Potato Starch

1/2 C Tapioca Starch

2-1/2 tsp. Xanthan gum

Make sure that whatever flour mix you use has xanthan gum in it or the biscuit dough will fall apart.

TinkerbellSwt Collaborator

I used Chebe mix, any one of them would work.. it is a thick dough, and i just simply rolled the little doggies in it and baked. Even my brother (who basically thinks I have an allergy and would have a sneezing fit if I ate gluten) he liked them!

kolka Explorer

These are not pigs in a blanket, but a good idea for a party snack:

Gluten Free Corn puppies (mini corn dogs)

1 c. Featherlight mix

VegasCeliacBuckeye Collaborator

I always thought pigs in a blanket was a sausage wrapped in a pancake or pancake batter...

jerseyangel Proficient

I always thought they were a ground meat mixture rolled into cabbage leaves and baked in tomato sauce :blink: Maybe I'm thinking of something else?

TinkerbellSwt Collaborator

Pigs in a Blanket are little cocktail hot dogs rolled in some type of biscuit dough, to resemble a mini hot dog.

arc Newbie
I always thought they were a ground meat mixture rolled into cabbage leaves and baked in tomato sauce :blink: Maybe I'm thinking of something else?

That is my wife's definition, too. What we (my family) called pigs in a blanket when I was growing up was hotdogs wrapped in crescent rolls.

Jennas-auntie Apprentice
That is my wife's definition, too. What we (my family) called pigs in a blanket when I was growing up was hotdogs wrapped in crescent rolls.

I've heard multiple things called pigs-in-blankets now, basically small meat pies of some kind-I grew up thinking they were Dutch in origin because I grew up with a bunch of Dutch-Americans who called them saucijzenbroodjes, and it was a big deal at the Tulip festivals they hold in the U.S. But they have a similar type food many places in the world(even a Peruvian restaurant I went to once had something very similar), so I'm not sure where they originated, but the Dutch-American version is ground meat in a roll within a puff pastry type thing.

newg Apprentice
Having a Christmas party, I am attempting to make it gluten free. Popular item is cocktailweenies wrapped in like biscuit dough. Has anyone ever attempted to make that gluten-free?

What if you wrap them in bacon? We had a party at work and they had these little hotdog things wrapped in bacon.

dragonmom Apprentice

Hi, I did a dry run and used the biscut dough, they turned out really well, thanks. The mini corn dogs are now on the list of things to try. The dogs wrapped in bacon sound good too, I wrap dates stuffed with montery jack cheese with bacon , sounds odd but tastes good.

mamaw Community Regular

Jersey Angel

We must have gone to the same school ,I too say pigs in a blanket is "Halupky" but I think the younger ones say they are the hot dog all wrapped up....

Water Chesnuts wrapped in bacon is a good one too..

mamaw

new to LI Newbie
I used Chebe mix, any one of them would work.. it is a thick dough, and i just simply rolled the little doggies in it and baked. Even my brother (who basically thinks I have an allergy and would have a sneezing fit if I ate gluten) he liked them!

I make them with chebe frozen pizza crust. works great tastes great.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,939
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Michelle C.
    Newest Member
    Michelle C.
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Wheatwacked
      Marsh 3b is the Gold Standard of diagnosis for Celiac Disease.  Until recently, regardless of antibody tests, positive or negative, you had to have Marsh 3 damage to be awarded the diagnosis of Celiac. As I understand you,  you were having constant symptoms..  Your symptoms improved on GFD, with occassional flare ups. Did your doctor say you do and you are questioning the diagnosis? Regarding your increasing severity when you get glutened it is "normal.  Gluten acts on the Opiod receptors to numb your body.  Some report withdrawal symptoms on GFD.  I was an alcoholic for 30 years, about 1/2 pint of voda a day. Each time I identified a trigger and dealt with it, a new trigger would pop up.  Even a 30 day rehab stint, with a low fat diet (severe pancreatis) during which I rarely had cravings.  Stopped at a Wendys on the way home and the next day I was drinking again.  20 years later, sick as a dog, bedridden on Thanksgiving, after months of reasearch, I realized that gluten free was my Hail Mary.  Back in 1976 my son was diagnosed at weaning with Celiac Disease and his doctor suggested my wife and I should also be gluten free because it is genetic.  At 25 years old I felt no gastro problems and promised if I ever did I would try gluten free.  Well, I forgot that promise until I was 63.  Three days of gluten and alcohol free, I could no longer tolerate alcohol. Eleven years gluten and alcohol free, with no regrets. Improvement was quick, but always two steps forward and one back.  Over time I found nineteen symptoms that I had been living with for my entire life, that doctors had said, "We don't know why, but that is normal for some people". Celiac Disease causes multiple vitamin and mineral deficiency.  It is an autoimmune disease, meaning your immune system B and T cells create antibodies against ttg(2) the small intestin in Celiac Disease and sometimes ttg(3) in skin in Dermatitis Herpetiformus.  Why is poorly understood.  In fact, it wasn't even know that wheat, barley and rye gluten was the cause.  Celiac Disease was also called Infantilism, because it was deadly, and believed to only be a childhood disease. So as part of your symptoms you must deal with those deficiencies.  Especially vitamin D because it contols your immune system.  Virtually all newly diagnosed Celiacs have vitamin D deficiency.  There are about 30 vitamin and minerals that are absorbed in the small intestine.  With Marsh 3 damage you may be eating the amount everyone else does, but you are not absorbing them into your system, so you will display symptoms of their deficiency.   As time passes and you replenish your deficiencies you may notice other symptoms improve, some you did not even know were sypmptos. Our western diet has many deficiencies build into it.   That is the reason foods with gluten are fortified.  Gluten free processed food are not required to fortify.  Vitamin D, Iodine, choline.  The B vitamins, especially Thiamine (B1) run deficient quickly.  We only store enough thiamine for 2 weeks for symptoms can come on quickly.  Magnesium, zinc, etc. each having its own symptoms affecting multiple systems.  High homocystene, and indicator of vascular inflamation can be cause by deficient Choline, folate, B6 and or B12.  Brain fog, deficient choline, iodine, thiamine. Dietary intake of choline and phosphatidylcholine and risk of type 2 diabetes in men: The Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study    
    • Rogol72
      I cut out the rice because it was affecting my stomach at the time ... not necessarily dermatitis herpetiformis. It was Tilda Basmati Rice, sometimes wholegrain rice. I was willing to do whatever it took to heal. Too much fiber also disagrees with me as I have UC.
    • trents
      But you didn't answer my question. When you consume gluten, is there an identifiable reaction within a short period of time, say a few hours?
    • Scott Adams
      You can still have celiac disease with negative blood test results, although it's not very common:  Clinical and genetic profile of patients with seronegative coeliac disease: the natural history and response to gluten-free diet: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5606118/  Seronegative Celiac Disease - A Challenging Case: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9441776/  Enteropathies with villous atrophy but negative coeliac serology in adults: current issues: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34764141/   
    • Scott Adams
      I am only wondering why you would need to cut out rice? I've never heard of rice being any issue in those with DH.
×
×
  • 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.